Discussion on Whether the Wildlife Trade Should be Banned for a Long Time

Authors

  • Manman Li
  • Mengyao Yang
  • Qiran Zhang
  • Lidong Ma

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54691/fhss.v3i2.4126

Keywords:

Data Processing; Animal Trade; Pearson Correlation; Multiple Regression Analysis.

Abstract

Wildlife markets are the suspected source of the current outbreak and the 2002 SARS outbreak, and the consumption of wild meat is thought to be the source of the Ebola virus in Africa. After the new coronavirus outbreak, the trade regarding wildlife markets was once again thrust into the limelight. We need to analyze how trade in wildlife products should be regulated in the context of relevant realities and specific data to answer the six questions in this case.

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References

Liu Hao. Characteristics of newly existing wildlife origin diseases and preventive and control measures [J]. Agricultural Disaster Research, 2016(6): 18-19.

Shi Xiangying, Zhang Xiaochuan, Xiao Lingyun et al. Investigation of public willingness to consume and trade wildlife during the new crown pneumonia[J]. Biodiversity,2020(5):630-643.

Sun Hao-Xue, Wang Jun-Dong, Wu Yan-Yun et al. Research on new and existing wild animal-derived diseases [J]. Heilongjiang Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine,2007(1):1-6.

Wang Wenxia, Hu Yanjie, Chen Shaozhi. Current status and insights of global sustainable use and trade of wildlife resources[J]. World Forestry Research,2017(3):1-5.

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Published

2023-02-20

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Li, M., Yang, M., Zhang, Q., & Ma, L. (2023). Discussion on Whether the Wildlife Trade Should be Banned for a Long Time. Frontiers in Humanities and Social Sciences, 3(2), 97-108. https://doi.org/10.54691/fhss.v3i2.4126