Fur trapping is a growing trade in the US

Thousands of wild mammals are still being trapped every year for their fur—and the number is increasing. In the case of bobcats, the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species notes that “challenges for long-term persistence [of bobcats] in some regions include market hunting for the fur trade.” The market is also growing for U.S. river otter, gray wolf, and brown bear skins, with prices per pelt rising beyond $300 as demand increases in China, Europe, and Russia. Fish and Wildlife Service’s wildlife export program. Fish and Wildlife Service finally issued a draft assessment last spring that analyzed the fur trade’s impact on bobcats, river otters, gray wolves, lynx, and brown bears in relationship to the export program. Trade of these species is allowed insofar as it “will not be detrimental to the survival of the species in the wild.” “If you don’t know what percentage of the population is being removed or killed on an annual basis, or [whether] there are signs that the population is taking a nose dive, then you can’t decide that the export of pelts is having a significant impact on the environment or these individual species,” says Cotton. In 2000, trappers in Montana self-reported 16 lynx caught in snares set for other species. (As WildEarth notes, lynx are extremely vulnerable to the body grip and foothold traps used to catch bobcats.) Only Alaska and Montana are allowed to export the pelts of gray wolves, which have just begun to recover and stabilize after near eradication from the western United States. “We know a lot more about the biology of these animals and their importance to these ecosystems than we did 20 years ago,” says Cotton. “It’s important to update these decisions and analysis accordingly.
You won’t believe this is still legal

Fur trapping in the United States did not go out with Jim Bridger and beaver-fur hats. Thousands of wild mammals are still being trapped every year for their fur—and the number is increasing. In 2011, for example, 16,258 wild bobcats were killed and their skins exported. By 2015, that number had soared to 65,603.

“The idea that you can remove tens of thousands of individuals of a species, and that would have absolutely no impact, makes no sense,” says Bethany Cotton, wildlife program director for WildEarth Guardians. In the case of bobcats, the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species notes that “challenges for long-term persistence [of bobcats] in some regions include market hunting for the fur trade.”

The market is also growing for U.S. river otter, gray wolf, and brown bear skins, with prices per pelt rising beyond $300 as demand increases in China, Europe, and Russia. Over the last five years, the Center for Biological Diversity has found that an average of 80,000 pelts of these animals have been legally exported under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s wildlife export program.

That program began in 1977 but operated for decades without an environmental assessment. In 2016, WildEarth filed suit, followed by CBD. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service finally issued a draft assessment last spring that analyzed the fur trade’s impact on bobcats, river otters, gray wolves, lynx, and…

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