Facebook and Illegal Wildlife Trade
Abuse, Conservation Carole Baskin Abuse, Conservation Carole Baskin

Facebook and Illegal Wildlife Trade

The provided report from the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime exposes how Facebook has become the primary global infrastructure for the illegal wildlife trade. Data collected by the Global Monitoring System reveals that nearly 75% of illicit wildlife advertisements appear on the platform, frequently involving critically endangered species protected by international law. The authors argue that algorithmic recommendations and thematic groups actively facilitate these criminal networks, often surfacing illegal content to users without a search. Despite public pledges to combat trafficking, Meta's internal enforcement and voluntary self-regulation are described as largely ineffective and plagued by multilingual moderation failures. To address this biodiversity crisis, the report calls for international regulatory coordination and the imposition of legal duties on social media companies to end platform-scale exploitation.

Read More
The Decade Rule
Abuse Carole Baskin Abuse Carole Baskin

The Decade Rule

Recent research published in Science establishes a direct link between the global wildlife trade and the transmission of zoonotic pathogens from mammals to humans. By analyzing four decades of data, scientists discovered that traded mammal species are significantly more likely to share infectious diseases with humans than those not involved in commerce. A critical finding reveals that for every ten years a species remains in the international market, it typically gains one additional shared pathogen with the human population. The risk of disease exchange is further heightened when animals are traded live or through illegal channels, where sanitary oversight is absent. These results suggest that the duration and intensity of human-animal contact in trade networks are primary drivers of potential epidemics and pandemics. Consequently, the authors advocate for stricter biosurveillance and updated international regulations to mitigate the inherent health risks posed by the commercial use of wildlife.

Read More
Forgotten Felines
Carole Baskin Carole Baskin

Forgotten Felines

While large felines typically dominate conservation headlines, new research highlights a disturbing and overlooked spike in the illegal trafficking of small and medium-sized wildcats. In nations like Colombia, hundreds of species such as ocelots and margays are being removed from the wild to be sold as exotic pets or for their physical parts. This underground industry often operates through voluntary surrenders, a legal loophole that frequently masks the true magnitude of poaching activities. Experts warn that this crisis extends across Latin America, Asia, and Africa, where smaller cats are increasingly vulnerable due to their proximity to human settlements. Because these animals receive less monitoring and protection than their larger relatives, many species face a silent decline toward extinction. Greater international scrutiny and better data collection are essential to uncovering and halting this widespread wildlife crime.

Read More
GWzoo
Abuse Carole Baskin Abuse Carole Baskin

GWzoo

Joe Exotic and Jeff Lowe's GW Zoo is closed forever by Big Cat Rescue.

Read More