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" ... Another cool thing about pangolins is that they can be akin to pest control professionals wearing armor. Sort of like Orkin goes to a Renaissance Festival. They use their long tongues and snouts to find and consume ants, termites, and other insects and larvae. The stickiness of their tongues can help suck up insects. An animal that mainly eats insects and curls up into a ball when threatened sounds pretty harmless, right? ... "
" ... But as people have seen with the ivory trade in elephant tusks and rhino horn, legal protection alone isn't enough -- countries must also enforce CITES rules. As the WWF added, this is needed so that pangolins are "given the chance to survive and lose their tag as the world's most trafficked mammal." ... "
" ... In fact, the research team found that the SARS-CoV-2 structure in general is quite different from what humans would have likely concocted. If a human had wanted to create a viral weapon, he or she would have started with the structure of a virus that’s already known to cause illness in people. Naturally, if you want to make a weapon, you may want to start with something like a grenade launcher rather than a smoothie maker, not that the virus looks like either. Instead, the structure of SARS-CoV2 is quite similar to those of viruses known to infect bats and pangolins. ... "
" ... The authors of the report had a whole host of recommendations for investment alongside reduced deforestation, such as more effective early detection and control, ending wildlife farming in China and reducing disease spillover via livestock. Discussions about phasing out the $20 billion wildlife farming sector in China are ongoing and it currently employs around 15 million people. The justification is that it creates risks for disease emergence while health and safety regulations associated with farming wild animals are mostly insufficient. The report remarks that laws to ban the national and international trade of high-risk reservoir species are necessary and that regulations must keep primates, bats, pangolins, civets and rodents out of markets. ... "