Thursday, February 12, 2026

China busts totoaba smuggling ring, seizes swim bladders worth US $26 million

The Chinese government has moved to stop the smuggling of illegal totoaba swim bladders from Mexico.

Chinese Customs announced on Christmas Day that an operation to bring down smuggling rings had led to the arrest of 16 individuals representing one of the main swim bladder trafficking gangs. Chinese authorities confiscated 444.3 kilograms of bladders worth an estimated US $26 million.

Though the investigation is still ongoing, preliminary results show the syndicate would purchase the bladders in Mexico and transport them to China in suitcases.

“For many years China was not aware of the illegal trade in totoaba bladders,” said Peter Knights, CEO of the non-governmental organization WildAid. “But when alerted, they stopped open trade and now they are taking down smuggling rings. Let’s hope their decisive action can help the remaining vaquita porpoises that are literally on the brink of extinction.”

The totoaba is a fish endemic to the upper Gulf of California and has been considered critically endangered since 1996. The totoaba shares the same habitat with the vaquita. Decades of destructive fishing practices and the rampant use of illegal gillnets to poach the totoaba have decimated the vaquita population, with now fewer than 20 individuals estimated to remain.

Earlier this month, an international group of scientists asked the Mexican government to issue a ban on possessing gillnets in the upper Gulf of California, a stronger measure than those introduced until now to save the vaquita porpoise.

Mexico News Daily

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
dam level measurers

Cutzamala, the Mexico City area’s main water supply system, is getting its first upgrade in 4 decades

0
The system, which carries water from three México state dams to 5 million users in the Valley of Mexico and its surroundings, uses some of the largest pumping equipment in the world.
stacks of peso bills signaling corruption

Mexico ranks last among OECD countries on 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index

3
According to a global ranking of how transparent a country’s public sector is perceived to be by experts and business executives, Mexico scored 24/100 in 2025, down from its highest score of 35 in 2014.
EL PASO OCTOBER 24. FedEx departs the El Paso International Airport on the way to Memphis on October 24, 2014 at El Paso, Texas.

Did a Mexican cartel just try to attack El Paso?

2
The FAA lifted the temporary closure of airspace over El Paso just hours after it said in a Notice to Airmen that aircraft could not fly above El Paso until Feb. 21 for "Special Security Reasons."
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity