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  • A wild sambar deer (Rusa unicolor) is seen on the grasslands at the  Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation area, Bukit Barisan National Park, South Sumtra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton
    548A7813.jpg
  • Wild asian water buffalo's graze on the grasslands at the Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation area, Bukit Barisan National Park, South Sumtra, Indonesia.Photo: Paul Hilton
    IMG_8674.jpg
  • A wild sambar deer (Rusa unicolor) is seen on the grasslands at the  Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation area, Bukit Barisan National Park, South Sumtra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton
    IMG_8588.jpg
  • Wild asian water buffalo's graze on the grasslands at the Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation area, Bukit Barisan National Park, South Sumtra, Indonesia.Photo: Paul Hilton
    548A7798.jpg
  • A pair of Sunda Pangolin were waiting to be sold in black market.<br />
<br />
They were too small in the market and would be kept for awhile until their size is big enough. Pangolin is the most trafficked mammal and they are sold by weight.
    Sunda Pangolin006.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin ( Manis javanica ).
    Sunda Pangolin010.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin was successfully released back to the forest. This pangolin was one of 97 live ones that confiscated from a warehouse in Medan, Indonesia.
    Sunda Pangolin002.jpg
  • A wild Sunda Pangolin sweeping forest floor for food.
    Sunda Pangolin004.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin ( Manis javanica ).
    Sunda Pangolin009.jpg
  • A wild Sunda Pangolin sweeping forest floor for food.
    Sunda Pangolin003.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin and its baby had just released from a bust in Medan, Indonesia, April 2015.<br />
<br />
These two were amongst 97 live who got released back into the forest. Pangolin is the most trafficked mammals in the world. Millions of them are hunted annually.
    Sunda Pangolin005.jpg
  • A baby of critically endangered Sumatran Elephant is pictured with it's mother in the Leuser Ecosystem.<br />
<br />
Leuser Ecosystem is the last place on earth where an elephant, rhino, orangutan and tiger can be found together in the same ecosystem.
    Sumatran Elephant002.jpg
  • Sumatran Elephant is a sub-species of Asian elephant, found exclusively in Sumatra.<br />
<br />
Listed as critically endangered by IUCN, the population is decreasing over 80% over the last three generations. Habitat loss and poaching are the main threats.<br />
<br />
As a keystone species, elephants have a critical role on the ecosystem. The absence of elephants will definitely change the balance of the ecosystem.
    Sumatran Elephant001.jpg
  • A portrait of male Sumatran Orangutan. Orangutan is the most arboreal of the great apes. Unlike their relatives, orangutans spend most of the time in trees. A male orangutan can be distinguished from the female by size and appearance. The dominant males have a pair of cheek pad.<br />
<br />
As the only great ape species in Asia, orangutans are now pushed into an extinction as a consequence of habitat loss and poaching. Both species, Sumatran Orangutan and Bornean Orangutan, are listed as critically endangered on IUCN Red List.
    Sumatran Orangutan001.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin was successfully released back to the forest. This pangolin was one of 97 live ones that confiscated from a warehouse in Medan, Indonesia.
    Sunda Pangolin001.jpg
  • Thousands of frozen Sunda Pangolin in a pit.<br />
<br />
These frozen pangolins were confiscated from a warehouse at harbour in Medan, North Sumatra, Indonesia. It was one of the biggest bust of pangolin in Indonesia. Along the frozen pangolins were 97 live ones and they were all succesfully released back into the forest.
    Sunda Pangolin 011548A2429.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin ( Manis javanica ).
    Sunda Pangolin007.jpg
  • A Sunda Pangolin ( Manis javanica ).
    Sunda Pangolin008.jpg
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_2609.jpg
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG-7266 (1).tif
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_3755.jpg
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_2624.tif
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_4575.jpg
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1530.tif
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1520.tif
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1511.tif
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1539-2.tif
  • Wild sambar deer (Rusa unicolor)  are seen on the grasslands at the  Tambling Wildlife Nature Conservation area, Bukit Barisan National Park, South Sumtra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton
    548A7814.jpg
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_7955.jpg
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_5083.jpg
  • A beautiful ringtail possum killed in the early hours of the morning. Some 4 million mammals are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    IMG_2505.jpg
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1536.tif
  • A whistling kite dies after being hit by a car on the outskirts of Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Some 4 million mammals and 6 million birds are killed annually on the Australian roads according to the CSIRO. Contributing to extinct of some species in the wild. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    A14I1509.tif
  • A poacher supplies pangolins to a restaurant to Mongla, Shan State, Myanmar. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    _I9X8225.jpg
  • HKG0120030718 HONG KONG , CHINA : Civet cats in filthy cages await their fate at Xin Yuan market, Guangzhou .Civet cats and dozens of other wild animals are soon to be back on mainland restaurant menus, with the lifting of a ban imposed during the Sars outbreak, according to Mainland Forestry Administration.The reason behind the lifting the ban was that the forestry administration believed the animal did not carry the coronavirus believed to cause Sars. Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china002.jpg
  • Stuffed exotic animals and other wildlife contraband at a police station in Banda Aceh, Sumatra Indonesia before they are destroyed after several busts of wildlife crime syndicates that had been operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem, the last place on earth where tigers, rhinos, elephants, and orangutans still coexist under the same canopy. The syndicates have trade routes, spanning the globe and as illegal palm oil expansion moves into the last remaining blocks of forest allowing poachers easy access to some of the last iconic species. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earthtree
    A14I0043.jpg
  • Stuffed exotic animals and other wildlife contraband at a police station in Banda Aceh, Sumatra Indonesia before they are destroyed after several busts of wildlife crime syndicates that had been operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem, the last place on earth where tigers, rhinos, elephants, and orangutans still coexist under the same canopy. The syndicates have trade routes, spanning the globe and as illegal palm oil expansion moves into the last remaining blocks of forest allowing poachers easy access to some of the last iconic species. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earthtree
    A14I0048.jpg
  • Civit cats are displayed in a wildlife market in China, during the SARS outbreak. Doctors confirmed the civit cats carry the caronavirus, and  warned the public that consuming these animals, could spread the virus. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a viral respiratory disease of zoonotic origin caused by the SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV). Between November 2002 and July 2003, an outbreak of SARS in southern China caused an eventual 8,098 cases, resulting in 774 deaths reported in 37 countries, with the majority of cases in China (9.6% fatality rate) according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    011.jpg
  • Civit cats are displayed in a wildlife market in China, during the SARS outbreak. Doctors confirmed the civit cats carry the caronavirus, and  warned the public that consuming these animals, could spread the virus. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a viral respiratory disease of zoonotic origin caused by the SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV). Between November 2002 and July 2003, an outbreak of SARS in southern China caused an eventual 8,098 cases, resulting in 774 deaths reported in 37 countries, with the majority of cases in China (9.6% fatality rate) according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    01.jpg
  • Civit cats are displayed in a wildlife market in China, during the SARS outbreak. Doctors confirmed the civit cats carry the caronavirus, and  warned the public that consuming these animals, could spread the virus. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is a viral respiratory disease of zoonotic origin caused by the SARS coronavirus (SARS-CoV). Between November 2002 and July 2003, an outbreak of SARS in southern China caused an eventual 8,098 cases, resulting in 774 deaths reported in 37 countries, with the majority of cases in China (9.6% fatality rate) according to the World Health Organization (WHO). Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    010.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2505.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2509.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2433-2.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2442.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2429.jpg
  • A critically endangered Sumatra elephant, waits for the anesthesia to wear off, after an operation to reduce a wound after the animals had been held in a poachers snare, Leuser Ecosystem, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo" Paul Hilton
    A14I9851.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2513.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    MR7A5260.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2450.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2414.jpg
  • 4,000 defrosting pangolins hidden in a shipping container behind a façade of frozen fish. This was one of the largest seizures of the animals on record, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2483.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Medan, animal market, Sumatra, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0828.jpg
  • This undated photograph shows a young Staint Bernard dog for sale at a wholesale market in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China. For the first time in China's history, dogs and cats may be off the menu according to a new draft in animal rights legislation. The draft proposed by mainland avocates, 27 Janaury 2010 is suggesting that eating dogs and cats would become a criminal offence carrying a maximum fine of 5,000 Yuan ( HK$5,700) or 15 days detention. EPA/Paul Hilton Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0007.jpg
  • A fruitbat hangs in a cage, at a wild animal market in Jakarta, Indonesia. Bats are consumer in many parts of Asia, but carry many viruses, the origins of diseases such as Sars and Ebola can be traced back to these flying mammals, and they have also been implicated in the spread of the new deadly Mers virus. In Africa, the straw-coloured fruit bat (Eidolon helvum), the continent's most widely distributed bat, is known to host different infectious diseases. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0959.jpg
  • A fruitbat hangs in a cage, at a wild animal market in Jakarta, Indonesia. Bats are consumer in many parts of Asia, but carry many viruses,  the origins of diseases such as Sars and Ebola can be traced back to these flying mammals, and they have also been implicated in the spread of the new deadly Mers virus. In Africa, the straw-coloured fruit bat (Eidolon helvum), the continent's most widely distributed bat, is known to host different infectious diseases. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0918.jpg
  • This undated photograph shows a young Staint Bernard dog for sale at a wholesale market in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China. For the first time in China's history, dogs and cats may be off the menu according to a new draft in animal rights legislation. The draft proposed by mainland avocates, 27 Janaury 2010 is suggesting that eating dogs and cats would become a criminal offence carrying a maximum fine of 5,000 Yuan ( HK$5,700) or 15 days detention. EPA/Paul Hilton Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0007.jpg
  • This undated photograph shows a young Staint Bernard dog for sale at a wholesale market in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China. For the first time in China's history, dogs and cats may be off the menu according to a new draft in animal rights legislation. The draft proposed by mainland avocates, 27 Janaury 2010 is suggesting that eating dogs and cats would become a criminal offence carrying a maximum fine of 5,000 Yuan ( HK$5,700) or 15 days detention. EPA/Paul Hilton Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china004.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2840.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2701.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    147_4769.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0005.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0005.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    China001.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _I9X0857.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_0103.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    147_4795.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2858.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2764.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2683.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    IMG_0080.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    148_4835.jpg
  • HKG06 20031112 HONG KONG , CHINA : A snake awaits it's fate in a snake restaurant in Sham Shui Po , Hong Kong 12th November 2003. Snake soup is said to have many benefits to your health and is best enjoyed in the winter months  but snake traders are in for a bleak season as China's ban on wildlife exports, introduced to curb SARS , threatens to deprive them of their livelihood . EPA PHOTO/PAUL HILTON Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0008.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    174_7478.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0006.jpg
  • HKG04 20040128 HONG KONG , CHINA : A Cormarant on display at Xin Yuan market , Guangzhou . China has announced that three provinces have avian flu H5N1 outbreaks two bordering on Guangdong which borders Hong Kong ,a few days after the first bird flu case among ducks was discovered .EPA/PAUL HILTON /file Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china03.jpg
  • A shop front displays python skins from Indonesia in Hong Kong, China, 08 October 2010. Snakeskin has become the latest must-have and designer labels including Jimmy Choo, Donna Karan, Mulberry, Gucci, Prada, Roberto Cavalli and Yves Saint Laurent have all used it in coats, bags and boots, claiming it is farmed, but according to TRAFFIC, the international wildlife trade monitoring network, python take too long to mature and are too expensive to rear in captivity. EPA/Paul Hilton Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    HKChina001.jpg
  • Illegally kept Slow Lorises climb around a cage on the outskirts of Kandang, South Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia. Trade in endangered species is illegal in Indonesia, but prosecutions are rare. As forests are increasingly cut down for palm oil plantations, trafficking in wildlife is growing, according to the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    548A8807.jpg
  • Illegally kept Slow Lorises climb around a cage on the outskirts of Kandang, South Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia. Trade in endangered species is illegal in Indonesia, but prosecutions are rare. As forests are increasingly cut down for palm oil plantations, trafficking in wildlife is growing, according to the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    548A8799.jpg
  • Illegally kept Slow Lorises climb around a cage on the outskirts of Kandang, South Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia. Trade in endangered species is illegal in Indonesia, but prosecutions are rare. As forests are increasingly cut down for palm oil plantations, trafficking in wildlife is growing, according to the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    548A8800.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    148_4823.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2776.jpg
  • Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    014.jpg
  • HONG KONG , CHINA : A snake awaits it's fate in a snake restaurant in Sham Shui Po , Hong Kong. Snake soup is said to have many benefits to your health and is best enjoyed in the winter months  but snake traders are in for a bleak season as China's ban on wildlife exports, introduced to curb SARS , threatens to deprive them of their livelihood   Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    china0008.jpg
  • Illegally kept Slow Lorises climb around a cage on the outskirts of Kandang, South Aceh, Sumatra, Indonesia. Trade in endangered species is illegal in Indonesia, but prosecutions are rare. As forests are increasingly cut down for palm oil plantations, trafficking in wildlife is growing, according to the Sumatran Orangutan Conservation Program. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Wild animal market, Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    548A8803.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Medan, animal market, Sumatra, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    IMG_8661.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Medan, animal market, Sumatra, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    IMG_8665.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Jakarta, animal market, Java, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0825.jpg
  • The preserved head of a Sumatran Hornbill waiting to be destroyed along with other animal contraband at a police station in Banda Aceh, Sumatra. Photo: Paul Hilton
    A14I0311.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Jakarta, animal market, Java, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0944.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Jakarta, animal market, Java, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0936.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Jakarta, animal market, Java, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0894.jpg
  • A Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang) or greater slow loris is pictured in the Jakarta, animal market, Java, Indonesia.The slow loris is targeted by poachers operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem for the exotic pet trade. Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    _I9X0839.jpg
  • A sunda pangolin is found in a transport cage, during a huge pangolin bust in Sumatra, Indonesia. Some 4000 frozen pangolin were destined for Veitnam and China, to be consumed in wildlife animal restaurants and to be used in Traditional Chinese Medicine or TCM. Photo; Paul Hilton / Earth Tree images wildlife trade, wildlife markets, wildlife crime, wildlife market, pangpolins,
    548A2259.jpg
  • Tiger taxidermies and other wildlife contraband at a police station in Jakarta, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree Images
    A14I5884.jpg
  • Stuffed tigers burning after several busts of wildlife crime syndicates that had been operating in and around the Leuser Ecosystem, the last place on earth where tigers, rhinos, elephants, and orangutans still coexist under the same canopy. The syndicates have trade routes, spanning the globe and as illegal palm oil expansion moves into the last remaining blocks of forest allowing poachers easy access to some of the last iconic species. Photo: Paul Hilton for Earth Tree
    AT0G6095.jpg
  • Millions are dogs are consumed every years across China, Vietnam, Indonesia and other parts of Asia. Their fur is also used across China as well. Guangzhou, China. Photo: Paul Hilton / Earth Tree Images
    _Y4D2773.tif
  • Staff at the Sumatran orangutan conservation program, quaratine centre, care for orphaned Sumatra Orangutans, outside Medan, Sumatra, Indonesia. Poachers often kill the mothers to capture the baby orangutans, so many orphaned orangutans end up in the pet trade and then later rescued. Photo: Paul Hilton for RAN ( no archives, no resales, one time use only )
    A14I3042.jpg
  • Sumatran orangutans at the Sumatran orangutan conservation program, quaratine centre outside Medan, Sumatra, Indonesia. Photo: Paul Hilton for RAN
    A14I2907.jpg
  • A sumatran Orangutan is seen in the Leuser Ecosystem, 06th August 2015. Photo: Paul Hilton / RAN
    548A9914.jpg
  • A sumatran Orangutan is seen in the Leuser Ecosystem, 06th August 2015. Photo: Paul Hilton / RAN
    548A9542.jpg
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