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Bittu Sahgal, Latika Nath, and Farwa Aamer on protecting South Asia’s biodiversity and the urgent need to conserve our ...
"Asia is way ahead of the curve when it comes to wildlife trade: in Africa bushmeat is a critical problem because wildlife is still locally abundant," said Dr. Elizabeth Bennett, director of the ...
Some of Asia’s iconic wildlife doesn’t seem to mind human encroachment Tigers, Asian elephants, wild boars, and clouded leopards have had population growth despite people living nearby.
Southeast Asia is a wildlife trade hotspot, functioning as supplier, consumer and a general import-export emporium. A large proportion of this trade is domestic and does not cross international ...
7 April 2020 - This World Health Day, as the world grapples with the worst public health emergency in recent memory, a new WWF report is being released which found that over 90 per cent of respondents ...
Will Asia stop eating wildlife? Over the last 20 years, demand for wildlife products in Asia has driven a collapse of animal populations there, as well as in Africa and Latin America.
Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and Vietnam form a kind of buffer zone around Thailand against the onslaught of the illegal wildlife trade that has engulfed Southeast Asia’s forests. If animals like ...
As COVID-19 restrictions ease in Southeast Asia, illegal wildlife traders are poised to make a comeback.
In February 2020, soon after COVID-19 was first detected at a market in Wuhan known for selling wild animals, the Chinese government announced a broad ban on wildlife consumption.
The glamping trend has swept through Asia, with new luxury tented camps setting up in the region's most pristine locations. The latest additions include the soon-to-open Cardamom Tented Camp and ...
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