Interview with Canadian expert who has researched the exotic animals trade
TORONTO — How do exotic animals go from living in the wild to sitting in a cage or tank in someone’s living room halfway around the world? Rosemary Collard, an assistant professor of geography at Montreal’s Concordia University, spent four years investigating the trade in live exotic animals, travelling to the Maya forest region to research animal capture, to exotic animal auctions in the U.S. and to animal rehabilitation centres in Guatemala and British Columbia. She spoke about her work with The Canadian Press.
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Q — Can you give me an idea of the size and scope of the exotic animal trade? I guess it’s mostly black market, right?
A — It depends on whose estimates you listen to. But it’s thought to be at least multiple billions a year, basically these massive flows of money and animals zooming around the world as we speak. Because so much of the trade, even the legal trade, so much of it is clandestine in a lot of cases, or the legality is ambiguous. And you have to be a real expert to even tell whether a species is labelled properly as it’s crossing borders. It makes it this incredibly murky economy.


