Life After Wildlife Trafficking: What Happens to Rescued Animals?
The Reveletor - A serious lack of data about the fate of wildlife saved from illegal trade leads to calls for better information and accountability....
Read MoreRead MoreThe Reveletor - A serious lack of data about the fate of wildlife saved from illegal trade leads to calls for better information and accountability....
Read MoreRead MoreNational Geographic - Millions of live animals enter the U.S. each year without disease screening—leaving us vulnerable to another outbreak, a former wildlife inspector says. ...
Read MoreRead MoreMirror - Robotic dolphins which weigh 250kg and behave just like their real-life counterparts could be used to put an end to welfare concerns surround the multi-billion-pound captivity industry. ...
Read MoreRead MoreSmithsonian Magazine - An American biologist wields an innovative weapon against the illegal trade in African ivory...
Read MoreRead MorePost Magazine - Drought-busting rain, a crackdown on the illegal trade in ivory and education in Asia to stem demand for it has seen new life blossom on the African savannah. A record-breaking 248 baby elephants were born in the Amboseli National Park last year,...
Read MoreRead MoreVN Express International - Police in Hanoi in collaboration with an environmental NGO have busted a pangolin scale trafficking ring in northern Vietnam. ...
Read MoreRead MoreGood News Network - Off the coast of New Zealand, a group of marine biologists has discovered a mother bottlenose dolphin that had adopted a baby pilot whale....
Read MoreRead MoreEuronews - An algorithm designed by a research group from the Universities of Bath, Oxford and Twente may be able to help save African elephants from extinction. Coupled with high-resolution imagery, the algorithm enables a satellite to scan large areas of land in short periods...
Read MoreRead MoreA new report has found that medicines containing pangolin scales are still being produced and sold throughout China, despite a recent ban on pangolin scales from the official list of approved ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine. According to the report, 56 companies are actively producing and selling...
Read MoreRead MoreNine tonnes of elephant ivory were destroyed this week in Singapore. It was the largest ivory crushing event in recent years and the nation was willing to forgo S$18 million (€11 million) worth of the rare material in the process. By pulverising the ivory in...
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