Culture

Museum of environmental crime opened in Rome

The museum, unique to Europe, reflects the Italians' consciousness regarding the consumption of animal and vegetable products.

The only Macri environmental crime museum in Europe (Macri, museo dei crimini ambientali) has opened in Rome on the territory of the Bioparco.

Immediately at the entrance to the museum, visitors will see a giant gaur, a wild bull from India.

He seems to be alive and reflecting on something. The impression is also contributed by a very informative video developed with the assistance of ethnologist Danilo Mainardi. And this is just the beginning of a fascinating walk among the flora and fauna presented on display at an area of ​​400 square meters.

  • Ticket price: adult - 15 euros, children under 12 years old - 12 euros, children up to 1 meter tall - free
  • Museum address: Viale del Giardino Zoologico, 20, 00197 - Roma (in the territory of Villa Borghese)
  • Official website of the Roman Biopark: www.bioparco.it

To describe the chronicle of the museum, it is enough to give only a few figures. So over the past year, Cites (an organization operating on the basis of an intergovernmental agreement and engaged in the control and protection of flora and fauna) has carried out 67,553 control activities, of which 1,714 in Italian territory and 65,839 in the customs zone.


Director of Cites in Italy, Ciro Lungo, spoke about the organization's activities:

"We went to Sardinia and seized a bear, a tiger and an elephant from the circus; we blocked the illegal trade in rhino horn; finally, we were able to intervene on the issue of genetic crossbreeding of dogs with wolves, because the problem here is not only pollution of the genetic code, but also a potential danger to people that will raise such animals. "

But Cites are not just animals. “By the end of last year, about 1700 Chilean cacti almost reached Italian balconies and gardens. But these cacti of amazing color and shape are on the list of 300 plants protected under the Washington Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora” (to in a word, the list of fauna representatives totals 500 species), ”Lungo added.


The research activities of the organization led to the idea of ​​creating a museum, divided into seven thematic sections: fires, pollution and waste, poaching, illegal deforestation, animal abuse, Cites history and detective technology.

As happens with any museum, the Makri did not fit all 71 thousand material evidence seized by Cites. Otherwise, one should divide the space into halls with cats, monkeys, parrots, rare predators, pythons, turtles, corals ... Therefore, only photographs of Italian illegal products and products of animal and vegetable origin are presented to the public for trial. The turnover of this market, by the way, at the world level is about 260 billion euros per year.

Watch the video: Top 10 Creepy Museums (November 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Culture, Next Article

Travel Guide to Rome Cheap
Tourism

Travel Guide to Rome Cheap

Very soon, a new edition will arrive on the shelves of bookstalls - "Rome Low Cost" - the original anti-crisis guide to the Eternal City. Many people today are interested in the question: is there a way to enjoy the sights of Rome, without spending a lot of money? The solution to the problem is offered by three metropolitan journalists, "bloggers" of the new online portal about travel, art, culture and culinary Nuok.
Read More
Italian Carlo Taglia traveled all over the planet by land and sea
Tourism

Italian Carlo Taglia traveled all over the planet by land and sea

The 29-year-old Italian Carlo Taglia traveled all over the planet by land and sea. In order to know the world and know himself, it took 95,450 kilometers 18 months of free time in 528 days, a plane ticket to get to the starting point, lack of fear. This is the formula for a successful trip around the world: three elements that can open any door, according to the 29-year-old traveler and blogger Carlo Taglia.
Read More
Georgian tourist tried to steal tiles from the Pompeii complex
Tourism

Georgian tourist tried to steal tiles from the Pompeii complex

A tourist from Georgia was detained while trying to steal a piece of tile from the unique mosaic of the cultural and historical complex of Pompeii. The man explained his actions by the desire to take "a piece of Pompeii as a keepsake." Manuchar Kublashvili “appropriated” three fragments of an ancient mosaic from the house of Trittolemo (Domus di Trittolemo) in Pompeii.
Read More