According to international statistics, the vast majority of the more than 30 infectious diseases discovered globally*** since the 1970s have been caused by human consumption of wild animals. This is because these animals themselves carry protozoa, trematodes, tapeworms, nematodes and other parasitic worms.
These parasites are commonly found in frogs, snakes, birds, pangolins, and other wild animals that humans eat.
When humans eat it into their bodies, it is very easy to induce diseases such as schistosomiasis. Therefore, the protection of wild animals is not only conducive to the elimination of the crisis of animals on the verge of extinction, but also conducive to the health of human beings, and is one of the most important policies to ensure the sustainable development of mankind.
Hunting and killing wild animals is not only a way of killing people, but also a way of destroying the ecological balance. Humans' attitude towards nature is often one of conquest and exploitation, in order to satisfy their own selfish interests. However, human beings do not know that this will eventually make human beings themselves face a serious crisis in the living environment.
Human beings should fully demonstrate the great wisdom of balance and harmony, and the animals in the natural world each in their own place, do not interfere with each other, to realize the balance between nature and human beings.