Protect Wild Animals From Being Ripped From Their Homes to Feed the Pet Trade
Final signature count: 1,865
1,865 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Wildlife trafficking is tearing Latin America's ecosystems apart. More than 100,000 animals—many endangered—have been captured and sold into the illegal pet trade.

Parrots crammed into Styrofoam coolers. Frogs stuffed into plastic bottles. Turtles locked in boxes with no air or water. This is not fiction—it’s the reality of wildlife trafficking across Latin America. Traffickers are tearing animals from the wild and sending them to markets in Europe and the United States. Most of these animals are alive when captured. Many die before they reach their destination1.
Hundreds of Species, Thousands of Victims
Between 2017 and 2022, more than 100,000 animals were seized across 18 Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America. Reptiles made up over half of those seizures. Birds and amphibians followed closely2. Most of these animals were destined for the exotic pet trade—fueled by collectors who will pay high prices for rare colors, species, or markings3. These aren't just numbers. Each animal taken from its habitat affects its ecosystem. Many are already endangered or vulnerable. Every species lost brings forests, rivers, and wetlands closer to collapse.
Loopholes That Let Criminals Thrive
Some of these trafficked animals end up in Europe, where regulatory loopholes allow traffickers to pass them off as captive-bred—even when they were caught in the wild3. Others end up in the United States, entering through border states like Texas and Arizona. The ports of El Paso, Nogales, and Dallas/Fort Worth have all received illegal shipments in recent years2. Traffickers thrive on weak enforcement and inconsistent laws. In some cases, they smuggle species not listed on international treaties like CITES, meaning there is no oversight or restriction once those animals leave their home country3.
This Is a Crisis for Wildlife, People, and Public Health
Wildlife trafficking threatens more than biodiversity. It places public health at risk. Animals transported in filthy, stressful conditions can spread zoonotic diseases like COVID-19 and Ebola1. These animals suffer. Communities suffer. And ecosystems unravel.
We Know Who Can Stop This
Environmental ministers and wildlife protection agencies in countries like Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Panama, and Suriname have the power to act. They can close legal loopholes, increase enforcement, and protect the animals that are being hunted, trapped, and sold every day.
Sign the petition today and tell these officials to end the illegal wildlife trade and protect the animals, people, and ecosystems that depend on their survival.