Using the 2020 global pandemic as a springboard to highlight the need for amphibian conservation in eastern Asia.
Amaël BorzéeJos KielgastSally WrenAriadne AnguloShu ChenKit MagellanKevin R MessengerCandace M Hansen-HendrikxAnne BakerMarcileida M Dos SantosMirza KusriniJianping JiangIrina V MaslovaIndraneil DasDaesik ParkDavid BickfordRobert W MurphyJing CheTu Van DoTruong Quang NguyenMing-Feng ChuangPhillip J BishopPublished in: Biological conservation (2021)
There is an increasing number of emerging infectious diseases impacting all species, including amphibians, reptiles and mammals. The latest threat to humans is the virus responsible for COVID-19, and the resulting pandemic. Countries in eastern Asia have taken steps to regulate wildlife trade and prevent further zoonoses thereby decreasing the risk of pathogens arising from wild species. However, as amphibians are generally excluded from regulations we support specific trade restrictions: I) Restrictions to amphibian farming; II) regulation of the amphibian pet trade; III) expansion of the wildlife trade ban. These restrictions will benefit both human and wildlife populations by decreasing the risks of zoonoses and better protecting the environment.