TRAFFIC has over 170 staff working on five continents towards the shared goal of reducing the pressure of unsustainable trade on natural biodiversity. Our team includes experts from a plethora of ...
At a time of unprecedented biodiversity loss, TRAFFIC is scaling up evidence, solutions, and influence to ensure that trade in wild species is legal and sustainable, for the benefit of the planet and ...
The trade in wild species is complex. Deepen your understanding with our tools and online courses that can help you act on illegal trade and enable you to support legal trade - regardless of whether ...
Nepal’s Himalayan forests, rich in biodiversity and home to numerous keystone species, are under threat. Overharvesting of wild plants and fungi, climate change, illegal trade, and inequitable supply ...
If you think you may have encountered illegal wildlife trade online, you can report it directly via the Coalition To End Wildlife Trafficking Online website.
Yaoundé, Cameroun, 21 décembre 2015—une visite de TRAFFIC menée dans quatre pays d'Afrique Centrale – le Cameroun, la République Démocratique du Congo (RDC), le Congo et le Gabon - a obtenu le soutien ...
Zanzibar is a known transit point for illegal wildlife products such as ivory, pangolin scales, sea turtles, and exotic animals. The illicit demand for these products endangers not only species but ...