Impacts of Taking, Trade and Consumption of Terrestrial Migratory Species for Wild Meat

A new report to the Secretariat of the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) by the Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) finds that domestic wild meat use significantly increases risk of zoonotic disease.

 

The Taking of Animals for Wild Meat Consumption Significantly Increases the Risk of Future Zoonotic Diseases

Analysing 105 of terrestrial mammals CMS species, the key take-away messages are:

    • 70% of hunted CMS terrestrial mammal species are used for wild meat consumption.
    • Taking for domestic use is a larger concern than international trade for most CMS terrestrial species

Nature Heritage´s Stephan M Funk contributed information on the zoonotic risks to the report by Lauren Coad, Jasmin Willis, Fiona Maisels, Stephan Funk, Hunter Doughty, Julia E. Fa, Juanita Gomez, Daniel J. Ingram, Yuhan Li, Lola Nihotte, Evi Paemelaere, Eugenio Sartoretto, Nathalie van Vliet and Robert Nasi

See the full press release by CMS here: >>>

See the Virtual media Launch on YouTube here: >>>

PDF icon CMS Report: Impacts of Taking, Trade and Consumption of Terrestrial Migratory Species for Wild Meat [Report]