My question is more to people familiar with the European trade and veterinary bureaucracy.
To my understanding, most rare animals, and many common ones, cannot be imported because of CITES.
Others, like ungulates, cannot be imported because of veterinary directives like BALAI.
Still others, like all Australian fauna, cannot be imported because of laws of the country of origin.
Which new threatened species can still be legally imported to zoos in Europe from the wild?
It looks, that ever growing laws largely killed an important way of conservation - saving new threatened species by breeding ex situ in European zoos. Yes, zoos can import some animals from zoos on another continent. But there must be already a thriving zoo population in zoos elsewhere - and even then, major groups, like all hoofed animals, are banned by veterinary laws.
To my understanding, most rare animals, and many common ones, cannot be imported because of CITES.
Others, like ungulates, cannot be imported because of veterinary directives like BALAI.
Still others, like all Australian fauna, cannot be imported because of laws of the country of origin.
Which new threatened species can still be legally imported to zoos in Europe from the wild?
It looks, that ever growing laws largely killed an important way of conservation - saving new threatened species by breeding ex situ in European zoos. Yes, zoos can import some animals from zoos on another continent. But there must be already a thriving zoo population in zoos elsewhere - and even then, major groups, like all hoofed animals, are banned by veterinary laws.