Stop the Illegal Wildlife Trade: Dr Jane Goodall on why wildlife trafficking must end

Leading conservationists – united at the Wildlife Conservation 20 summit – presented an urgent plea to G20 leaders. Here, Dr Jane Goodall, one of those who took part, explains why action is so desperately needed

Jane Goodall
Wednesday 10 February 2021 05:59 EST
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Dr Jane Goodall calls for an end to the illegal trade of wildlife
Dr Jane Goodall calls for an end to the illegal trade of wildlife ((The Jane Goodall Institute/JGI USA Comms))

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There’s absolutely no doubt that wildlife trafficking plays an incredibly important role in the creation of new zoonotic diseases.

We destroy habitats, forcing some animals into closer contact with humans. We hunt them, capture them, and traffic them – or their body parts – around the world, to sell in wildlife markets in Asia, Africa and South America.

We sell them for food, for medicine, and for the growing trade of wild animals as pets. In all of these conditions, which are usually cruel and unhygienic, we create the perfect environment for a pathogen, such as a virus or bacteria, to spill over from an animal to a human, where it may create a new disease.

Read more: The Independent unites leading conservationists in landmark declaration at G20

In this case, the virus Covid-19 is thought to have started in a wildlife market in China. And caused the pandemic that is causing such chaos around the globe. I should say here, that intensive animal farming, or factory farms, equally cruel and equally creating crowded conditions, also provide wonderful opportunity for the creation of zoonotic diseases. And many have in fact originated in factory farms.

Preventing wildlife trafficking and curtailing industrial animal farming will not be easy, but it is tremendously important. Existing laws, very often, must be enforced, and sometimes new laws made.

Law enforcements officers must be more rigorously trained in how to deal with confiscated animals. And sanctuaries must be created or supported so that the confiscated animals can be rehabilitated so as many as possible can be returned to the wild.

This means we must restore destroyed habitats and protect existing habitats, so that there is somewhere for them to go back in the wild.

Above all, we must work with local communities, helping to find alternative ways, without destroying the environment, without depending on wild animals for their livelihoods.

The role played by education cannot be overestimated. So that more and more people understand that the demand for wildlife is simply not sustainable and it is extremely devastating to human health, biodiversity and habitat loss.

Young people particularly need to be educated, and hopefully this education will reduce and eventually eliminate the demand for these products,

I hope it will be possible to continue these discussions into the future. So much depends on this.

Donate to Space for Giants, the charity partner of The Independent’s Stop the Illegal Wildlife Trade campaign, HERE.

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