Portugal joins international efforts to combat wildlife crime
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Wildlife Crime Academy, a proven model
Portugal joins the Academy
From June 10 to 12, 2025, another Level I training took place, titled ‘Foundations of Forensic and Police Investigation in Wildlife Crime’ and focused on tackling illegal wildlife killing, poisoning and trapping.
This edition was attended by 37 professionals from nine countries – Bulgaria, Cyprus, France, Greece, Montenegro, Portugal, Serbia, Slovenia and Spain – who, over three intensive days were trained in securing crime scenes, conducting forensic necropsies, collecting toxicological evidence, and managing wildlife crime investigations.
The course took place at the International University of Andalusia, in La Rábida (Spain), and marked the first training under the WCA project. The Junta de Andalucía, internationally recognized for its leadership in this field, again delivered the course, sharing insights grounded in decades of expertise.
The next steps in each country, including Portugal, include taking part in international level II and III training, organizing multiplier training at national level and setting up a working group. Each group will make a diagnosis of the general situation of wildlife crime in the country and propose measures to improve the effectiveness in the various stages of analyzing wildlife crimes. The WCA will also promote cross-border collaboration and information sharing through platforms such as Europol and CMS/MIKT.
In Portugal, the institutions that will be trained or involved in the WCA include, among others, the National Republican Guard (GNR) and the respective Nature and Environmental Protection Service (SEPNA), the Institute for Nature Conservation and Forests (ICNF), the National Network of Recovery Centers for Fauna, the National Network of Necropsy and Toxicology Centers, environmental NGOs, and the Attorney General’s Office .
In Portugal, these activities will be coordinated by the Vulture Conservation Foundation, in partnership with the League for the Protection of Nature (LPN) and the Portuguese Society for the Study of Birds (SPEA), optimizing the experience already acquired in projects such as LIFE Imperial, LIFE Rupis and LIFE Nature Guardians. The WCA’s work in Portugal also complements the efforts carried out under the LIFE Aegypius Return project, which aims to protect the Cinereous Vulture (Aegypius monachus) and reduce threats to this species, such as illegal poisoning, shooting and disturbance.
Long-term impact
The Wildlife Crime Academy is not only training professionals — it’s helping reshape how institutions think about and respond to wildlife crime. Each participant, whether trained by the Academy or through national courses, will be better prepared to act, collaborate, and protect wildlife from one of today’s most pressing threats.
Over the next four years, the WCA will:
- Train 100 new wildlife crime experts through four international cohorts;
- Deliver national training programmes in at least 15 countries across Europe, North Africa and the Caucasus, reaching 1,000+ professionals;
- Establish formal working groups connecting enforcement and environmental authorities;
- Promote cross-border collaboration and intelligence-sharing through platforms like Europol and CMS/MIKT.
Target countries include Slovenia, Montenegro, Romania, the northern part of Cyprus, Portugal, Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, Georgia, Turkey, France, Bulgaria, Greece, Serbia and Spain.
Acknowledgements
This initiative is possible thanks to the collaboration of the Vulture Conservation Foundation, Junta de Andalucía and the EU LIFE Programme, with the strategic support of: MITECO, Guardia Civil, Europol, CMS/MIKT, BirdLife International, International University of Andalusia, MAVA Foundation, EuroNatur and the governments of the participating countries.
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