VN wants CITES protection for native species

February 26, 2019 - 17:58

Việt Nam is seeking consensus from members of CITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, on tightening the protection of some endangered species in the country.

A Hữu Liên gecko, one of the gecko species only found Việt Nam. — Photo Việt Nam Creatures
Viet Nam News

THỪA THIÊN-HUẾ — Việt Nam is seeking consensus from members of CITES, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, on tightening the protection of some endangered species in the country.

The list of the animals in need of greater protection includes 13 species of gecko, 13 species of newt and several other species of knobby newt. According to CITES Việt Nam, those species become endangered due to trade that sold them to Europe, the US and China as demand for pets grew starting in the 1990s.

Those species are under high threat of extinction, CITES Việt Nam said. It said Europe and China made the same recommendation in an attempt to protect them.

The list made by CITES Việt Nam included five species that are endemic to the country. They are the Cát Bà tiger gecko, Hữu Liên gecko, Lichtenfelder’s gecko, Vietnamese warty newt and Vietnamese knobby newt.

Việt Nam also wanted CITES to move three species listed in Appendix II to Appendix I for better protection. They are Vietnamese three striped box turtle (Cuora trifasciata), Vietnamese pond turtle (Mauremys annamensis), and Flower backed box turtle (Cuora galbinifrons).

Việt Nam will join the CITES summit in May in Sri Lanka. The summit includes discussions of measures to protect giraffes from narrowing habitats, Mako sharks from fin trafficking, white rhinos from horn trafficking and Sri Lankan salamanders and 10 ray species from overexploitation.

CITES has 184 members, and Việt Nam joined in 1994. It has separate lists of endangered species, vulnerable species and species its members should protect to prevent exploitation. It connects members in combating trafficking.

This year’s recommendations, once approved at the summit, will protect the safety of 574 species, including mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, invertebrates and flora. — VNS

E-paper