Most exotic animals seen on the pet trade

Random question: On a lot of these exotic pet websites I often see "owl monkeys" for sale but the specific species is never specified. Does anyone have any clue as to which species are commonly sold?
 
Nancy Ma's.

More than that is present in the trade. I've seen Three-Striped purchased from the pet trade show up in a roadside zoo before, and I'd imagine the ex-AZA Grey-Legged are still about. Some Bolivian appear to be in private hands, too, but idk if they're available.

~Thylo
 
I believe they're Nancy Ma's as well. I was surprised at how common they are when I first started to look into the private trade.
 
I believe they're Nancy Ma's as well. I was surprised at how common they are when I first started to look into the private trade.

Owl monkeys have commonly been in medical research, as they are one of the few other primates susceptible to malaria and thus serve as an ideal organism for testing antimalarial treatments. I'm sure many (if not most) of the animals in the private trade made their way there from biomedical labs - Nancy Ma's being one of the more common species.
 
Owl monkeys have commonly been in medical research, as they are one of the few other primates susceptible to malaria and thus serve as an ideal organism for testing antimalarial treatments. I'm sure many (if not most) of the animals in the private trade made their way there from biomedical labs - Nancy Ma's being one of the more common species.

There are also now private breeders of night-monkeys who will further supplement the trade.

~Thylo
 
More than that is present in the trade. I've seen Three-Striped purchased from the pet trade show up in a roadside zoo before, and I'd imagine the ex-AZA Grey-Legged are still about. Some Bolivian appear to be in private hands, too, but idk if they're available.

~Thylo

I didn't say they were the only species ;) Just most common. All of the ones I've recently come across have been Nancy Ma's.
 
According to USDA inspections, Pacific Animal Productions in California owns a Northern Tamandua. Don't most facilities have Southern Tamandua?
 
According to USDA inspections, Pacific Animal Productions in California owns a Northern Tamandua. Don't most facilities have Southern Tamandua?

Southern is what AZA zoos have, while non-AZA is where you'll occasionally find Northern (supposedly). Alabama gulf coast zoo, gone wild safari, lupa game farm (both species), san antonio aquarium, southwick, wild mind science learning, zoosiana, and zootastic all are listed as having northern.
 
According to USDA inspections, Pacific Animal Productions in California owns a Northern Tamandua. Don't most facilities have Southern Tamandua?

Yes, most have Southern.

Knowing the USDA inspection lists, it could be misidentified. I know there's been discussion on the forum before about a population of animals in US roadside zoos and the private sector being called "Northern Tamandua", despite looking very much like Southern Tamanduas.
 
The USDA lists include a number of misidentified holdings, and list animals by common name which can make species verification difficult. I think they work best when cross-referenced with other sources so that one gets a consistent picture - not unlike many other resources. It's too bad there's oftentimes not many other sources to verify with...

Even so, there is another issue as it relates to the Northern Tamandua: if the collection thinks their animals are Northern Tamandua, most likely the inspectors will list them as such - even if that identification is wrong. True confirmation would have to come from import/pedigree documents or from visual identification by someone familiar with the genus.

Based on the name and location, I assume it's a company that sources animals for film production - perhaps we can root out what movies the anteater has done cameos in and have someone verify based on that? :p
 
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