US says Mexico failed to stop illegal wildlife trade threatening vaquita

The US interior secretary declares that Mexico has failed to halt the illegal wildlife trade threatening the world's smallest porpoise: vaquita.

FILE PHOTO: A mother and calf vaquita, a critically endangered small tropical porpoise native to Mexico’s Gulf of California, surface in the waters off San Felipe, Mexico in this handout picture taken in 2008. Paula Olson/NOAA Fisheries/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo

MEXICO CITY — The US interior secretary on Friday declared that Mexico has failed to halt the illegal wildlife trade threatening the world’s smallest porpoise, the critically endangered vaquita, a move that opens the path for a possible trade embargo.

The vaquita, native to Mexico’s Gulf of California, is imperiled by black market fishing for an endangered fish called the totoaba, whose bladder is highly valued in Asia for use in traditional medicine. Mexico’s government has been under pressure to crack down on this illicit fishing.

“The government of Mexico has failed to stem the illegal harvest and commercial export of totoaba,” United States Interior Secretary Deb Haaland wrote in a notification letter to the US Congress. “This illicit trade has direct negative impacts on the survival of the vaquita.”

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Under US law, the president may embargo wildlife products and limit other imports from nations deemed by the interior secretary to engage in trade that undermines the effectiveness of any international treaty protecting endangered species to which the United States is a party.

Haaland’s letter did not mention a possible trade embargo. Under US law, the president must notify Congress within 60 days of any action aimed to encourage conservation.

Mexico’s government did not immediately respond to a request for comment. On Thursday, the government said “immediate work” was being done on an action plan to protect the vaquita.

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The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in March said Mexico had failed to deliver an appropriate plan to protect its totoaba.

Fishing for the totoaba has brought the vaquita to the brink of extinction because the marine mammals can get tangled in nets cast by illegal fishers.

Sarah Uhlemann, international program director at the non-profit United States-based Center for Biological Diversity, said trade sanctions are crucial because without strong and immediate international pressure the vaquita could be lost forever. The United States imported about $798 million of fishery products from Mexico last year, the group said.

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