The same Japanese company that got the African giant shrew imported an Olingo.
What's the name of this Japanese company if I may ask?
The same Japanese company that got the African giant shrew imported an Olingo.
I know I'm late to this party but I've just seen a baby giraffe advertised for sale on a Florida based online exotic pet store!
Are they? I had no idea! I live in the UK, a pet giraffe seemed pretty outrageous to me! Well learn something everyday I guess.Giraffes are fairly common in the pet trade.
I suppose it depends if you can open the car roof and avoid low bridges
Giraffes are common in the United States. They're just expensive. (Who's surprised by that, though.)
Are they? I had no idea! I live in the UK, a pet giraffe seemed pretty outrageous to me! Well learn something everyday I guess.
I wouldn't call king cobras docile, far from itI suppose it does depend on the "type" and individual personality of each animals as the genus can be quite variable in their aggression and behavior.
~Thylo
Did you see these orangutans and bears for sale recently? I would have thought they would be at least not openly advertised.
In Africa I saw a live pangolin on a market. The problem was the dilemma if buying and releasing it would simply prompt more catch.
But I guess this thread is about animals for sale internationally.
Not all these animals will necessarily have been wild caught. I bred seven Red-whiskered Bulbuls last year, and another six this year. Breeding pair were both bred in UKI have noticed this report by TRAFFIC about the exotic pet trade on Facebook in Thailand, showing animals offered for sale in 2016. Over a two-month period, 1,521 exotic animals of 200 species were found being sold.
Among mammals, the three most commonly sold species (in order from highest to lowest) were:
1. Sunda slow loris (139 individuals)
2. Common palm civet (55 individuals)
3. Unidentified squirrels (36 individuals)
Among reptiles, the three most commonly traded species were:
1. African spurred tortoise (115 individuals)
2. Green iguana (76 individuals)
3. Elongated tortoise (31 individuals)
Among birds, the most commonly traded species were:
1. Red-whiskered bulbul (33 individuals)
2. Common hill myna (29 individuals)
3. Shikra and black-winged kite (22 individuals each)
Starting on appendix one (page 15) is the full list of species found being offered for sale from June-July 2016; the entry that perhaps surprised me the most was three different pygmy hippopotamuses - not sure where such animals would be sourced from?
The full report is included here:
https://www.traffic.org/site/assets/files/11073/trading_faces_thailand_2019.pdf
I'd also like to say, some of the most interesting species I've seen in the trade (most of these when we travel across South-east Asia and in the markets there) would be Birds-of-paradise, Tree Kangaroos, Cuscus, Tarsiers and Asian Golden Cat.
There is also a large assortment of small mammals, birds, herptiles and inverts, and I've also seen primates like Orang-Utans and langurs, to big carnivores like Clouded Leopards and Sun Bears.
One of the most bizarre things, however, I have ever seen in a wildlife market, was an echidna. This was, if memory serves me right, in Bitung, Indonesia. The locals told us that they're usually for eating but sometimes people would buy them live to keep them as pets. I would hazard a guess to say that these animals unfortunately would not have lived for very long.
Where did you see Asian Golden Cat and tree kangaroos for sale?