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Wildlife Trade Increases Pathogen Transmission: University of Lausanne Study Reveals Global Risks

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The UNIL Breakthrough: Linking Wildlife Trade to Zoonotic Risks

A groundbreaking study from the University of Lausanne's Department of Ecology and Evolution has quantified a critical link between global wildlife trade and the transmission of pathogens from animals to humans. Published on April 9, 2026, in the prestigious journal Science, the research reveals that wild mammals involved in trade are 1.5 times more likely to share infectious agents—such as viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites—with humans compared to non-traded species. This finding underscores the urgent need for enhanced biosurveillance and trade regulations, particularly as Europe plays a significant role in both legal and illegal wildlife markets.

The study, led by former UNIL postdoctoral researcher Jérôme M.W. Gippet (now at the University of Fribourg) and supervised by Associate Professor Cleo Bertelsmeier, analyzed four decades of import-export data spanning legal and illegal activities. It highlights how prolonged exposure in trade networks amplifies pathogen spillover risks, with species accumulating an additional shared pathogen with humans roughly every nine to ten years of market presence.

Busy wildlife market with various mammals highlighting pathogen transmission risks

This research not only bridges ecology and public health but also positions UNIL as a leader in addressing Anthropocene challenges like biological invasions and emerging diseases.

Global Wildlife Trade: Scale and Scope

The wildlife trade encompasses live animals for pets, zoos, and research, as well as products like fur, skins, horns, and scales. It involves approximately one quarter of all terrestrial mammal species worldwide—over 2,079 species documented in trade records. In Europe, the EU serves as a major transit hub and consumer market, with nearly 5,200 seizures recorded in 2023 alone, primarily involving European eels, timber, and medicinal plants, though mammals like big cats and primates are also seized.

Legal trade is regulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), which lists over 40,900 species. However, illegal trade persists, with Europe reporting significant volumes. A 2025 TRAFFIC report notes the EU's role in trafficking critically endangered species, amplifying risks beyond extinction to public health. Zoonotic diseases, which account for 75% of emerging infectious diseases globally, often trace back to such human-animal interfaces.

Unpacking the Methodology: Data-Driven Insights

Researchers compiled 40 years of CITES trade records (1980s–2020s) with comprehensive host-pathogen databases, focusing on wild mammals (non-domesticated, excluding cats, dogs, cattle). They modeled trade status, duration, and type (live vs. products, legal vs. illegal) against pathogen sharing probabilities using statistical analyses like generalized linear mixed models.

  • Trade data: Permits for imports/exports, seizures for illegal activity.
  • Pathogen data: Known associations from literature, excluding domestic animals.
  • Controls: Phylogenetic relationships, geographic range, body mass to isolate trade effects.

This rigorous approach confirmed trade as an independent driver of zoonotic potential, independent of other traits.

Key Findings: Quantifying the Threat

The study's results are stark: 41% of traded mammals share at least one pathogen with humans, versus lower rates for non-traded ones. Live-traded species, especially in markets or as pets, pose higher risks due to prolonged human contact. Illegal trade exacerbates this, as does longer market tenure—one extra pathogen per decade.

MetricValue
Traded vs. Non-Traded Odds Ratio1.5x higher pathogen sharing
Pathogens per Decade in Trade+1 shared with humans
Traded Mammal Species Analyzed2,079
Proportion Sharing Pathogens41%

High-risk taxa include primates (e.g., rhesus macaques), carnivores (otters, bears), and rodents (sugar gliders).

A herd of deer grazing on a grassy hillside.

Photo by U K Mogit on Unsplash

Case Studies: From Outbreaks to Everyday Trade

Historical examples abound: COVID-19 linked to Wuhan's wildlife market, 2003 U.S. monkeypox from imported Gambian rats and prairie dogs, HIV from bushmeat. In Europe, seizures of live cheetahs and leopard cats highlight ongoing risks. Recent avian flu outbreaks in wild birds (581 cases in 2025) underscore broader wildlife disease dynamics, though mammalian trade focuses this study.

Exotic pets like fennec foxes and African pygmy hedgehogs, popular via social media, exemplify how consumer demand drives risky trade.

Europe's Position: Markets, Transit, and Policy Gaps

The EU enforces CITES via Regulation (EC) No 338/97, but gaps persist. A 2024 CITES-WOAH MoU addresses zoonoses, yet focuses remain on conservation over health.Learn more about this collaboration. With 2025 seizures up, including South American felids, Europe must integrate pathogen screening into trade permits. UNIL's work urges updating policies for cumulative risks.

Map of EU wildlife trade seizures highlighting zoonotic hotspots

UNIL's Department of Ecology and Evolution: A Hub of Excellence

Located on Lake Geneva's shores, UNIL's DEE spans invasive species, evolutionary genomics, host-parasite dynamics, and conservation. With diverse groups (25+ nationalities), it excels in fundamental-to-applied research, teaching MSc in Behaviour, Evolution & Conservation, and PhD programs. This study exemplifies DEE's impact on global challenges.

Spotlight on the Researchers Driving Change

Jérôme Gippet, PhD, specializes in human-wildlife interactions, invasions, and urban ecology. His UNIL postdoc under Bertelsmeier honed skills in big data and modeling. Cleo Bertelsmeier, macroecologist, uses ants to study invasions and climate impacts; cited 8,000+ times. Their collaboration yields policy-relevant science.

a herd of deer standing next to a pile of hay

Photo by Jonathan Lim on Unsplash

Policy Recommendations and Global Solutions

Gippet emphasizes reducing trade volume: "Limit encounters to curb emergence." Bertelsmeier calls for fundamental research informing health. Solutions include CITES pathogen criteria, market biosurveillance, consumer awareness. Europe could lead with EU-wide screening.WOAH guidelines offer a framework.

Future Outlook: Research Careers at the Forefront

UNIL DEE offers PhDs, postdocs in ecology/evolution, fostering skills in modeling, genomics. Europe's research landscape demands experts in zoonoses, with positions in conservation biology rising. Aspiring researchers can contribute to preventing pandemics while advancing academia.

As climate change intensifies invasions, studies like this propel interdisciplinary careers, blending ecology, epidemiology, and policy.

Portrait of Jarrod Kanizay
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Jarrod KanizayView author

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Frequently Asked Questions

🔬What is the main finding of the UNIL wildlife trade study?

Wild mammals in trade are 1.5 times more likely to share pathogens with humans, gaining one extra shared pathogen every decade.Read the paper.

🦠How does wildlife trade facilitate pathogen spillover?

Prolonged human-animal contact during capture, transport, and markets creates transmission opportunities, especially for live animals.

🦔Which species are highlighted as high-risk in the study?

Hedgehogs, pangolins, bears, otters, primates like rhesus macaques, and exotic pets like sugar gliders.

🇪🇺What role does Europe play in global wildlife trade?

Major transit hub with 5,200+ seizures in 2023; enforces CITES but needs pathogen-focused updates.

👥Who led the UNIL study?

Jérôme Gippet (first author, ex-UNIL) and Cleo Bertelsmeier (supervisor, Assoc Prof DEE), with Yale collaborators.

📊What data sources were used?

40 years CITES records + host-pathogen databases, controlling for phylogeny and traits.

Are finished products risky?

No direct risk from items like fur or ivory, but supply chain (hunting/transport) fuels pathogens.

📜What policy changes are recommended?

Reduce trade volume, add pathogen screening to CITES, enhance biosurveillance.UNIL news.

🏫How does UNIL DEE contribute to this field?

Hosts groups on invasions, evolution, conservation; MSc/PhD programs in ecology.

💼Career opportunities in ecology research?

PhDs/postdocs at UNIL DEE; roles in zoonoses, invasions across Europe via AcademicJobs.

🦇Link to past outbreaks like COVID-19?

Trade markets implicated; study shows cumulative risk over time.