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Though
habitat loss is often cited as the primary threat to wildlife,
commercial hunting for the meat of wild animals has become the
most significant immediate threat to the future of wildlife in
Africa and around the world; it has already resulted in widespread
local extinctions in Asia and West Africa. This threat to wildlife
is a crisis because it is rapidly expanding to countries and
species which were previously not at risk, largely due to an
increase in commercial logging, with an infrastructure of roads
and trucks that links forests and hunters to cities and consumers.
The bushmeat crisis is a human tragedy as well: the loss of wildlife
threatens the livelihoods and food security of indigenous and
rural populations most dependant on wildlife as a staple or supplement
to their diet, and bushmeat consumption is increasingly linked
to deadly diseases like HIV/AIDS, Ebola, and Foot and Mouth disease.
The Bushmeat Crisis Task Force (BCTF) facilitates the work of its
members in identifying and implementing effective and appropriate
solutions to the commercial exploitation of endangered and threatened
species used as food. The primary BCTF Goals established are to
(1) enable information sharing and create an information sharing
mechanism on the bushmeat issue, (2) engage key decision makers
in the United States, Europe and Africa, (3) build awareness and
provide education across sectors, and (4) foster collaboration
among member and partner institutions.
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