Abstract

Demand for totoaba swim bladders has created a transnational illicit supply chain network. Organised crime groups are instrumental in this process, impacting Mexico at social, environmental, economic, and political levels. There are five main points within the supply chain: the poachers in the Upper Gulf of California, the Mexican illegal traders, the Chinese illegal traders in Mexico, illegal traders and retailers in China and Hong Kong, and the consumers and investors located primarily in China. Illegal fishers in Mexico use gillnets to capture totoaba, leading to bycatch and decline of the critically endangered vaquita. There have been significant conservation efforts by the local and international communities to reduce this bycatch, but these have been unsuccessful in addressing the continued trafficking of totoaba and the decline of the vaquita. Here we highlight the complexity of the totoaba supply chain and argue that totoaba illegal trade has to be viewed as organised environmental crime rather than as a conservation issue. A particularly enforceable point in the chain is through the Chinese organised crime group in Mexico, which is a crucial link to onward trafficking through ports and airports. While recent efforts have been made with regard to totoaba seizures and prosecutions, to dismantle the supply chain, strong transnational collaboration is needed at multiple levels, and in particular between Mexico, the USA, and China.

Full Text
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