Brazil's Illegal Bird Trade, Juliana Machado Ferreira
Brazilian biologist Juliana Machado Ferreira discusses the illegal wildlife trade in Brazil. She tells “The WildLife” host Laurel Neme about the domestic market for pet birds and what role wildlife forensic research can play in helping to expose and stop this trade. She also discusses her genetic research into the DNA of four songbird species and how knowledge of their geographic origin can help with the rehabilitation and release of illegally captured animals. Juliana Machado Ferreira is a passionate Brazilian biologist who seeks to save the world one bird at a time. She is a TED Senior Fellow and is pursuing her doctorate in Conservation Genetics at the Laboratory of Evolutionary Biology and Vertebrate Conservation (LABEC) at São Paulo University. She also works with SOS Fauna. Her current research project involves developing species-specific molecular markers and population genetics studies of four passerine birds, with the aim to understand the distribution of their genetic variability and to track down the origin of birds seized from illegal trade. She works closely with the US National Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratory, and her ultimate goal is to help set up a Wildlife Forensics Laboratory in Brazil. (First aired on June 21, 2010)
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Elephants Rhinos Orangutans and Palm Oil Other Primates Big Cats Bears Other Mammals Insects Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Climate Change Poaching Poisons Wildlife Trade Wildlife Forensics Wildlife Research Working Dogs Wildlife and Health Wildlife Rehabilitation Economics and Wildlife Wildlife Law Enforcement Wildlife Filmmaking Journalism and Wildlife CITES Asia, Southeast Asia, and Middle East Latin America North American Wildlife Activism Veterinarian Stories Podcasts by Subject