Robert Ng/South China Morning Post/Getty
Wuhan has banned the eating of wild animals, with officials declaring the city a "wildlife sanctuary."
Neighboring Hunan and Jiangxi have announced plans to stop farmers from breeding exotic animals, with cash offered for current stock.
China's fur trade will continue, though, and wild animals can still be reared for medicine, entertainment, and scientific research, according to Reuters.
The new measures are part of China's efforts to stem the transmission of zoonotic diseases from animals to humans.
Wuhan, China, has banned the eating of wild animals and farmers in neighboring regions are being offered cash incentives to stop breeding exotic livestock.
Both steps are part of China's ongoing efforts to stem the transmission of viruses from animals to humans.
On Wednesday, authorities in Wuhan, a city of 11 million in Hubei and the epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic, announced eating wild animals would be banned, according to CBS News.
Wuhan would become a "wildlife sanctuary," officials said, with a citywide prohibition on hunting except for "scientific research, population regulation, monitoring of epidemic diseases and other special circumstances," according to the Independent.
Before it was shuttered in January, merchants at Wuhan's Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market sold and slaughtered beavers, porcupines, and baby crocodiles, National Geographic reported.
Other so-called "wet markets" reopened after the citywide lockdown was lifted, according to ABC News.