Stop Tiger-Breeding Farms

  • by: Ruth McD
  • recipient: U.S. Legislators

Almost all of Americas 7,000 tigers are born and raised here. Reports from tiger farms suggest there are many unscrupulous breeders, and activists allege that the trade is cruel. What is clear is that tigers are often kept in small pens, people die when safety is lax, and the cats are hideously inbred to produce valuable white cubs. There are tiger farms also in other countries like China. They use the bones of the tigers to make medicine.

The trade is not illegal, though a recent law bans the sale or trade of big cats across state lines for the pet trade. But breeders exploit a patchwork of state-by-state rules, and loopholes, to continue to sell cubs. People who rescue unwanted or mistreated tigers estimate that the number of breeders might be in the hundreds. Several alleged traders contacted by NEWSWEEK refused to be interviewed, perhaps because in recent years many operations have been shut down by authorities.

One of the biggest, Savage Kingdom, in Florida, was closed by the Department of Agriculture in 2006. Several accidents had occurred there. In 2001 a handyman named Vincent Lowe went into a cage to repair a dangerously worn-down gate. Colleagues had to watch as a 318-pound male tiger, Tijik, ripped out [his] throat, according to the USDA report. They could not rescue him for fear of being attacked themselves.

The tiger was eventually shot by Savage Kingdoms octogenarian owner, Robert Baudy, who had been in the tiger trade for many decades he'd even been on The Ed Sullivan Show promoting his animals. %u201CHe was from an era before animal welfare, says Jamie Veronica, who is with the charity Big Cat Rescue and went into the farm after it was closed to try to remove and resettle dozens of tigers (all were eventually moved safely). When he started out, people just saw animals as a commodity, a way to make money. The USDA report blamed Baudy for safety failures that led to Lowes death. He could not be reached for comment at a number listed for him.

Baudy specialized in white tigers, which sell for up to $20,000 per cub. But white tigers are rare genetic mutations, not a different species. According to the San Diego Zoo, every American white tiger is descended from a single father. New cubs must be inbred further. For every healthy, valuable cub, it is thought that many are born with ailments like shortened tendons, club foot, kidney problems, malformed backbones, contorted necks, and twisted faces.

Emily McCormack, a zoologist at Turpentine Creek, a refuge in Arkansas that rescues unwanted or abused big cats, has taken in several deformed cubs. "People don't want these tigers because they don't look perfect," she says. "Who's to say how many have been born with deformities that have been killed instead of rescued?" Activists also campaign against so-called white-tiger-conservation programs, whose very descriptions, says McCormack, are misleading: They will never be returned to the wild. They do not really exist in the wild."

Siegfried & Roy, the illusionist duo, are famous for their white tigers. They claim on their Web site that they have 38. "For more than 20 years, they say, we have been entrusted with the care and preservation of the Royal White Tigers." A spokesperson for the two did not return calls for comment about their breeding program. A statement from the Mirage Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, which houses many of Siegfried & Roys white tigers in an attraction called the Secret Garden, did not directly address the possibility that the program may have bred deformed cubs. It did say that breeding is done responsibly under strict genetic management. The Mirage did not respond to NEWSWEEKs request for more information.

 

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service

50 CFR Part 14

RIN 1018-AT69

 
Regulations To Implement the Captive Wildlife Safety Act

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.

ACTION: Final rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, are implementing the
Captive Wildlife Safety Act (CWSA) in a new subpart K of part 14,
Importation, Exportation, and Transportation of Wildlife, in Title 50
of the Code of Federal Regulations. The CWSA amends the Lacey Act by
making it illegal to import, export, transport, sell, receive, acquire,
or purchase, in interstate or foreign commerce, live lions, tigers,
leopards, snow leopards, clouded leopards, cheetahs, jaguars, or
cougars, or any hybrid combination of any of these species, unless
certain exceptions are met.

DATES: This final rule is effective September 17, 2007.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kevin Garlick, Special Agent in
Charge, Branch of Investigations, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, (703)
358-1949.
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