Learn languages naturally with fresh, real content!

Popular Topics
Explore By Region
A global effort to tighten wildlife trade rules at the CITES conference faces U.S. opposition on rattlesnakes, amid rising illegal pet trade fueled by online platforms.
A global push for stricter wildlife trade rules is underway at the CITES conference in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, as conservationists warn that online marketplaces and social media are fueling illegal demand for exotic pets like Galapagos iguanas, African tortoises, and Latin American tarantulas.
Proposals include bans or tighter controls on several endangered species, amid reports of over 100,000 animals seized or poached in Latin America between 2017 and 2022, with reptiles making up 60% of the trade.
Despite U.S. support for most measures, it opposes restrictions on rattlesnakes.
Critics highlight enforcement gaps, including mislabeling wild-caught animals as captive-bred, enabling continued trafficking.
Un esfuerzo global para endurecer las reglas del comercio de vida silvestre en la conferencia CITES se enfrenta a la oposición de Estados Unidos sobre las serpientes de cascabel, en medio del aumento del comercio ilegal de mascotas impulsado por plataformas en línea.