Geneva, Switzerland – Next week, a senior political appointee at the Department of the Interior will lead the American team at a key international gathering that shapes rules for the global trade in wildlife. Jenifer Chatfield, deputy assistant secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks, is scheduled to head the U.S. delegation to the 34th meeting of the CITES Animals Committee. The session runs July 13-17 and will examine biological data that informs how countries regulate commerce in endangered species. Chatfield’s selection marks a departure from past practice. The role has traditionally gone to the chief of the U.S. CITES Scientific Authority, a position held by a biologist with deep expertise in taxonomy and conservation. Her appointment in May 2025 by the second Trump administration places a veterinarian with commercial family connections at the front of the delegation for the first time.
Who Chatfield Is and What the Role Entails
Chatfield is a board-certified veterinarian who now oversees policy for the nation’s fish, wildlife, and parks programs. In that capacity she will direct a six-member group that includes five scientists and one State Department staff member. The Animals and Plants committees meet twice between the every-three-year Conference of the Parties, where all 184 CITES member nations vote on trade proposals. The committees review scientific evidence on species status and recommend whether international commerce should be restricted, permitted under quotas, or left unregulated. Their advice directly affects which animals and plants can be sold across borders as pets, trophies, leather goods, or traditional medicines.
Family Business and the Question of Interests
Multiple sources familiar with the delegation told Mongabay that Chatfield’s family operates a commercial breeding operation involving wild animals. The arrangement creates an obvious overlap between her public responsibilities and private financial interests. No evidence of improper conduct has been reported, yet the situation has drawn attention from conservation advocates who track CITES decisions. Wildlife Conservation Society vice president Susan Lieberman noted that the scientific authority chief has historically led such delegations. Shifting that responsibility to a political appointee whose family profits from breeding raises questions about how competing priorities will be balanced during technical discussions.
Stakeholders Watching the Outcome
Several groups have a direct stake in the committee’s work: – Conservation organizations that push for tighter controls on trade in threatened species.
– Commercial breeders and traders who rely on clear, predictable rules for legal shipments.
– Government agencies in other countries that implement CITES decisions at ports and borders.
– Travelers and tourists who purchase wildlife products as souvenirs or encounter captive-bred animals on wildlife tours. The decisions reached in Geneva will influence enforcement practices for years to come, affecting both protection efforts and legitimate business operations.
What Comes Next
The meeting begins in two days. Observers will watch whether Chatfield’s leadership produces any noticeable shift in the U.S. posture on breeding or trade proposals. The committees themselves do not vote on final rules; they supply the scientific foundation that later guides the full Conference of the Parties. For now, the practical effect remains to be seen. The tension between regulatory duty and family enterprise will be tested in real time as the delegation weighs evidence on dozens of species.