An orangutan hangs off a branch with its young in forest

Volume 66  Issue 4

Winter 2017

In this Issue

AWI examines the fate of illegally traded wildlife—how confiscated animals are handled and what should be done to ensure their well-being once they are out of the clutches of wildlife traffickers. Hundreds of cats and dogs are rescued in the nick of time from the Virgin Islands after Hurricane Irma. AWI exposes an attempt to gloss over animal abuse at federal agricultural research labs. France ends the breeding of orcas and other cetaceans in captivity.

A 2013 UN report stated that from 2005–2011, over 1,000 orangutans were intercepted from wildlife traffickers. This is only a fraction of the ones taken or slaughtered, however. Poachers routinely kill mother orangutans to steal their babies for the pet trade. But what happens when illegally obtained animals (orangutans and countless other species) are seized by authorities? Some are returned to the wild. Others remain in captivity. Some are simply euthanized. Read more on how best to ensure that deliverance from the smuggling pipeline really does mean an end of the ordeal for such confiscated animals.



More in this Issue

House Committee Approves Anti-wildlife Bills 

Marine Wildlife, Terrestrial Wildlife

Wayne Lotter

Terrestrial Wildlife

Reviews

illustration of shark with scuba diver

Shark Lady

Marine Wildlife
map tracking animals

Where the Animals Go

Marine Wildlife, Terrestrial Wildlife
two wild horses gallop

Wild Horse Country

Equines, Terrestrial Wildlife