Speak out against public handling of big cats!.
It’s no secret that one of the biggest problems fueling the U.S. big cat trade is the fact that dozens of traveling zoos and roadside exhibitors, including many USDA-licensed facilities, regularly profit from charging the public a fee to pet, play with and take photos with tiger cubs and other big cats.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)’s big cat database provides a map of exhibitors who currently advertise these types of interactive opportunities online. Tragically, some exhibitors even allow the public to swim with big cat cubs, forcing the animals into water in order to make even more profit.
To the frustration of many caring animal advocates these activities are, for the most part, legal, because of an informal rule created by the USDA to only prohibit contact with cubs under 8 weeks old when their immune systems are still developing and when they are over 12 weeks old when they are dangerous.
The result is a 4 week window during which it is legal for the public to handle big cats, so hundreds of cubs are born each year to supply these profit-making schemes.
Sadly, some members of the public are manipulated by the exhibitors into thinking that these opportunities contribute to big cat conservation and rescue.
But nothing could be further from the truth.
What happens to a poor cub when he gets bigger, stronger, more dangerous and less profitable?
That is the big unknown—but all too often, it will come down to this: he will be kept in someone’s backyard; he will be sent to a roadside zoo; he will be incessantly bred to further fuel the cub handling trade; or he will simply be killed.
There is no reason why any member of the public should ever come in contact with wild animals and their cubs.
You now have the opportunity to let USDA know you object to this inhumane and dangerous trade.
In recognition of the one-year anniversary of the Zanesville tragedy, last October IFAW joined the Humane Society of the United States and other animal welfare organizations as co-petitioner of a petition for rulemaking that urges the USDA to ban all public contact with big cats and certain other exotic species.
Thankfully, the agency has made the petition available for public comment.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)’s big cat database provides a map of exhibitors who currently advertise these types of interactive opportunities online. Tragically, some exhibitors even allow the public to swim with big cat cubs, forcing the animals into water in order to make even more profit.
To the frustration of many caring animal advocates these activities are, for the most part, legal, because of an informal rule created by the USDA to only prohibit contact with cubs under 8 weeks old when their immune systems are still developing and when they are over 12 weeks old when they are dangerous.
The result is a 4 week window during which it is legal for the public to handle big cats, so hundreds of cubs are born each year to supply these profit-making schemes.
Sadly, some members of the public are manipulated by the exhibitors into thinking that these opportunities contribute to big cat conservation and rescue.
But nothing could be further from the truth.
What happens to a poor cub when he gets bigger, stronger, more dangerous and less profitable?
That is the big unknown—but all too often, it will come down to this: he will be kept in someone’s backyard; he will be sent to a roadside zoo; he will be incessantly bred to further fuel the cub handling trade; or he will simply be killed.
There is no reason why any member of the public should ever come in contact with wild animals and their cubs.
You now have the opportunity to let USDA know you object to this inhumane and dangerous trade.
In recognition of the one-year anniversary of the Zanesville tragedy, last October IFAW joined the Humane Society of the United States and other animal welfare organizations as co-petitioner of a petition for rulemaking that urges the USDA to ban all public contact with big cats and certain other exotic species.
Thankfully, the agency has made the petition available for public comment.
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