ABSTRACT More than 37,000 animal and plant species are protected by CITES meaning a significant burden for enforcement officers. We aimed to identify mammalian taxa and goods of mammalian origin that are most frequently traded and, thus, most frequently inspected and identified by relevant authorities in the EU. Additional aims were to find if there are any relations between the traded taxa and the form in which they are traded and traded taxa/type of goods and the legality of the transaction. In total, 176,185 shipment-by-shipment records from the CITES Trade Database (legal trade) and 7,294 seizure records from EU-TWIX (illegal trade) concerning trade in mammals in the EU between 2005 and 2019 were analyzed. Artiodactyla, Carnivora, Cetacea, Primates and Proboscidea were the most frequently traded orders. The results did not exclude the existence of any of the mentioned relationships. When the most traded genera were analyzed, 6 out of the first 15 showed to be joint between legal trade and seizures. When only records with known genera were considered, the 15 most frequently traded genera represented 83.24% of legal trade and 82.89% of seizures. The results can facilitate the prioritization of the taxa and goods to take appropriate responses within law enforcement.
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