Wild at heart
Read our 'Wild at Heart' report and learn about the cruelty of the exotic pet trade.
Images: World Animal Protection / Aaron Gelecki
Our houses are no home for a wild animal. Learn how we’re tackling it.
Whether they are bred in captivity or caught from the wild, it is still cruelty to rob these living beings of their rich lives in the wild, where they belong.
Sign our pledge, and help us protect wildlife by keeping them where they belong. In the wild.
Snakes, parrots, iguanas, lizards, tortoises, and even otters – these are just some of the species suffering as pets around the world.
There are legal and illegal sides to the exotic pet trade. But legality doesn’t matter; captive-bred or wild caught – it’s all cruel. And this trade is growing fast.
No wild animal can have its needs entirely met when kept as a pet. In a home, there is no way to replicate the space and freedom they would have in the wild.
Many are kept in spaces vastly smaller than their natural habitats, meaning they can’t perform normal behaviours. Often, exotic pets don’t receive the correct nutrition, even if owners try their best to feed them properly.
Simply, if they’re not in the wild they will experience some level of suffering.
These animals suffer long before they reach our homes, too. Many exotic pets suffocate and die in transit before they even reach pet stores. Often, they’re shipped huge distances, and taken to countries vastly different from their original homes.
Many exotic pet owners, however, are unaware of the daily suffering their animals endure.
We encourage everyone to appreciate and respect wild animals where they belong – in the wild. We should only share our homes with domesticated animals who’ve evolved over thousands of years to be our companions, and whose needs can be completely met as pets.
For more information, read our full report – Wild at Heart: The Cruelty of the exotic pet trade.
Read our 'Wild at Heart' report and learn about the cruelty of the exotic pet trade.
Every year, millions of wild animals are captured to become pets of people who are unable to properly care for them.
Global wildlife trade is an inhumane industry that cruelly exploits our planet’s wildlife for financial gain.