Bushmeat training programs help build the capacity of wildlife and protected area managers dealing with the bushmeat crisis every day.
Commercial logging in Central and West Africa opens up roads and access to commercial hunters and can lead to wildlife populations’ decline.
Bushmeat for sale in Yaounde, Cameroon. Clockwise from top-left: civet, dwarf crocodile, tortoises, monkey, and duiker (smoked and dried). The crocodile and tortoises were still alive at the time of the photo. © Andrew Tobiason /BCTF.
Humans share much of our DNA with great apes and monkeys like this black and white colobus. Bushmeat hunting exposes humans to diseases carried by non-human primates, and vice versa.
Young chimpanzees, gorillas and bonobos are often orphaned by the bushmeat trade, when their parents are killed for their meat.
Crocodiles and other reptiles are also affected by the bushmeat crisis. Often captured and transported live, crocodiles can suffer a great deal before they are butchered.
Bushmeat & Wildlife Trade
Asian Wildlife Trade
Logging and Forest Policy
BCTF Resources
| Downloads | Size |
|---|---|
| The Role of the Logging Industry (Fact Sheet) | 182.19 KB |
| Le Role de L'Industrie Forestiére (Fiche d'Information) | 111.75 KB |
| Engaging the Private Sector in the Bushmeat Crisis (AZA article) | 727.55 KB |






