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Thứ Hai, ngày 25/11/2024

Consumption of wildlife drops almost 30% over links to COVID-19

02/11/2021

    A new World Wildlife Fund (WWF) commissioned report reveals that nearly 30% of people surveyed across China, Myanmar, Thailand, Việt Nam and the United States say they have consumed less or stopped consuming wildlife altogether because of the global health crisis.

    Specifically, 28% of those surveyed in China consume less wildlife or have stopped consuming wildlife because of COVID-19, with numbers doubling over the last year in Thailand (to 41%) and remaining relatively stable in Việt Nam (39%). In the United States, 12% of participants say they consume less or have stopped consuming wildlife. There remains a committed contingent of wildlife consumers, however, with 9% of participants intent on buying wildlife products in the future in all five countries.

    Research shows that up to three-quarters of emerging infectious diseases, including COVID-19, are zoonotic, meaning they jump from animals to humans. Key drivers of zoonotic disease include, high-risk wildlife consumption and trade and deforestation.

Closing risky wildlife markets will help wildlife populations recover

    The new data shows strong global understanding that risky animal-human interaction, often connected to deforestation and high-risk wildlife trade, can lead to serious disease outbreaks.

    Key report findings: 46% of all survey participants listed disease transmission from animals to humans as the root cause most likely to trigger future pandemics; Support is strong in all five countries to back government efforts to close high-risk markets selling wildlife (85%) and stop deforestation (88%); In the United States, 72% surveyed believe closure of high-risk wildlife markets is very or somewhat effective to prevent similar pandemic diseases from happening in the future; 59% of Americans surveyed said they would be extremely worried or very worried about a similar outbreak if measures weren’t taken to close high-risk markets; 67% of Americans said they are more likely to buy from companies taking action to prevent pandemics, including implementing sustainable resource use and stopping deforestation.

    “The world has gotten a crash course this past year in pandemics. Preventing future ones requires us to repair our broken relationship with nature, and that starts with ending the trade and consumption of high-risk wildlife and stopping deforestation”, said President and CEO of WWF-US Carter Roberts.

    This new research shows that the public supports those changes and the survey confirms that when policy change happens, consumer behavior change often follows. The Chinese Government announced a broad ban on the consumption of wild animals in February 2020 and the survey found that in China, closing high-risk wildlife markets is seen as the most effective measure to prevent pandemics (91%).

    In Việt Nam, where the Prime Minister also announced actions against the illegal wildlife trade last year, 84% of respondents agree that closing high-risk wildlife markets is crucial.

    WWF-US is calling on Governments to adopt a One Health approach to deforestation and high-risk wildlife trade. WWF is also calling for the U.S Government, G-7 Leaders and multilateral organizations to take immediate action to address high-risk wildlife markets and strengthen national legislation, regulation and enforcement to support these actions over the long term. WWF urges decision-makers to take the critical steps needed to address key drivers of zoonotic disease outbreaks in their pandemic prevention plans. Halting deforestation and closing risky wildlife markets will help wildlife populations recover while maintaining local and global biodiversity that naturally helps regulate disease.

    High-risk wildlife is defined as groups of species that pose a particular risk for the transfer of zoonotic diseases. They are rodents, bats, shrews and shrew-like relatives, primates, carnivores and ungulates. Rodents carry 85 known zoonotic diseases, carnivores 83, primates 61, ungulates 52, bats 25 and shrews 21.

 

Mai Hương

(Source: Vietnam Environment Administration Magazine, English Edition III - 2021)

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