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Published in: EcoHealth 1/2017

Open Access 01-03-2017 | Original Contribution

Summarizing US Wildlife Trade with an Eye Toward Assessing the Risk of Infectious Disease Introduction

Authors: K. M. Smith, C. Zambrana-Torrelio, A. White, M. Asmussen, C. Machalaba, S. Kennedy, K. Lopez, T. M. Wolf, P. Daszak, D. A. Travis, W. B. Karesh

Published in: EcoHealth | Issue 1/2017

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to characterize the role of the USA in the global exchange of wildlife and describe high volume trade with an eye toward prioritizing health risk assessment questions for further analysis. Here we summarize nearly 14 years (2000–2013) of the most comprehensive data available (USFWS LEMIS system), involving 11 billion individual specimens and an additional 977 million kilograms of wildlife. The majority of shipments contained mammals (27%), while the majority of specimens imported were shells (57%) and tropical fish (25%). Most imports were facilitated by the aquatic and pet industry, resulting in one-third of all shipments containing live animals. The importer reported origin of wildlife was 77.7% wild-caught and 17.7% captive-reared. Indonesia was the leading exporter of legal shipments, while Mexico was the leading source reported for illegal shipments. At the specimen level, China was the leading exporter of legal and illegal wildlife imports. The number of annual declared shipments doubled during the period examined, illustrating continually increasing demand, which reinforces the need to scale up capacity for border inspections, risk management protocols and disease surveillance. Most regulatory oversight of wildlife trade is aimed at conservation, rather than prevention of disease introduction.
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Metadata
Title
Summarizing US Wildlife Trade with an Eye Toward Assessing the Risk of Infectious Disease Introduction
Authors
K. M. Smith
C. Zambrana-Torrelio
A. White
M. Asmussen
C. Machalaba
S. Kennedy
K. Lopez
T. M. Wolf
P. Daszak
D. A. Travis
W. B. Karesh
Publication date
01-03-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
EcoHealth / Issue 1/2017
Print ISSN: 1612-9202
Electronic ISSN: 1612-9210
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10393-017-1211-7

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