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Humane Society Wants Tougher Exotic Pet Rules in Texas

By: Anna Whitney, The Texas Tribune
Updated: February 9, 2012
Biology professor Sheree Daniel is inviting 60 of her students over this weekend for an anatomy lesson at her house in East Texas, where they will dissect horses that she will feed to Cruizer, her 22-year-old African lion.

Daniel has had Cruizer since he was 10 weeks old. But keeping him hasn't been easy. She has spent thousands to house Cruizer and even had to fight the county sheriff when he tried to outlaw exotic pets like Cruizer. Daniel could be in for another fight next year, though, when the Humane Society of the United States plans to ask lawmakers to tighten rules on exotic pets statewide. While Daniel argues that as an animal breeder and professor, she is qualified to care for her lion, the animal rights organization said private ownership of exotic pets can be hazardous for the public and for the animals.

"It's a real public safety issue," said Jordan Crump, a spokeswoman for the Humane Society of the United States.

Since 2001, Texas law has required that people who own exotic animals like Cruizer -- or other exotic animals like lions, bears and chimpanzees -- register their animals with their municipal or county animal control offices. The law leaves it up to local governments to regulate exotic pet ownership or ban it outright. When the sheriff of Kaufman County, where Daniel lives, decided to ban exotic animals in 2007, she fought to keep Cruizer, and won. She said the sheriff allowed her and a few other long-time owners in the county to keep their animals. 

"I said, 'That's bulls*t. I'm going to fight you tooth and nail. He's 16, and they don't live to be 15 or 16 usually,'" she said. "Mine needs to live where he lives until he does die."

Texas is one of 13 states that require registration in counties where exotic animals are allowed. But many states are moving toward banning private ownership of exotic animals -- 21 states already have comprehensive bans, and another eight states ban most exotic animals as pets, said Adam Roberts, executive vice president of the animal advocacy group Born Free USA.

Crump said the average person doesn't know how to adequately care for exotic animals and doesn't house them in cages that protect them from the public. Last month, the Humane Society seized 11 animals -- including two wolf hybrids, two cougars and macaque -- from a roadside zoo in Mississippi after an undercover investigation revealed conditions there put animals and people at risk. 

Crump, who helped rescue the animals and transport several of them to Texas animal shelters, said people who had lived in the neighborhood by the zoo had been afraid the animals would get out because the cages were not up to code.

"The owners said, 'These animals are our pets,' but the tigers had no names; there were no extensive medical records," Crump said. "This is not appropriate."

While exotic pet ownership is a problem nationally, Crump said, it's even more pronounced in Texas.

"Statistics show that there are more tigers held privately in Texas than are alive in the wild right now," she said. 

Exotic animal incidents in the past year have even put people at risk. Last year in Odessa, a 4-year-old boy was injured when he was mauled by a family member's pet mountain lion. Also last year, in Zanesville, Ohio, a man released his 56 exotic animals from their cages before he shot himself. Schools were closed while authorities captured some animals and killed many others.

Some Texas counties -- including Travis and Bexar counties -- have banned owning exotic pets. But others, like Harris County, allow it. Harris County Veterinary Public Health is in charge of animal control there, but smaller counties that don't have animal control departments rely on local sheriffs to monitor exotic pets.

"What we have is a patchwork of local laws," said Nicole Paquette, the Humane Society's Texas senior state director. "People are county-shopping, and they're moving into areas where it's legal to own these animals."

Daniel agreed that keeping exotic animals as pets isn't for everyone -- but she said she has the experience and the resources to take care of a large, aggressive animal. She is a biology professor at Trinity Valley Community College, has worked in a veterinary clinic for 20 years and has raised dogs for 35 years. She has spent thousands of dollars on Cruizer's cage and upkeep.

"I'm a special case," she said. "It's not for the average person. It's not even for the above-average person."

Daniel said that she's already fought to keep Cruizer once, and that she'll do it again.

"There's no use in trying to take mine away," she said. "Not everybody who has these animals is inexperienced or irresponsible."

Editor's note: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the Humane Society of the United States would seek to ban exotic pets in Texas. The organization is seeking to strengthen laws that regulate the ownership of such animals.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/texas-legislature/texas-legislature/humane-society-wants-texas-ban-exotic-pets/.

Comments

Contrary to speculative claims by animal rights organizations that Texans own 2,000 to 4,000 "backyard" tigers, a Feline Conservation Federation (FCF) study of tigers in Texas revealed the population is much closer to 300, and almost none of them are pets. "I am disappointed at these organizations, but not surprised," says FCF executive director Lynn Culver. "The backyard tiger is a hoax, fabricated by animal rights groups to inflame public hysteria for fund raising purposes." To locate and document the nationwide captive wild cat population, FCF researchers combined USDA species inventories, state wildlife agency reports, county registrations, state health department records, FCF feline census data, interviewed feline breeders and sanctuary operators, and investigated stories on the Internet. According to FCF research the latest count of Texas tigers is 312 tigers, housed in 47 locations. Nine Texas sanctuaries hold 107 tigers, and 36 tigers reside in 13 Texas zoos. And the "urban legend" pet tiger is nearly non-existent. A World Wildlife Fund (WWF) press release, Black Market Feeds on Bodies of America's Backyard Tigers, describes Leigh Henry, WWF spokesperson, as worried 5,000 American tigers are in danger of being killed by their owners, who would sell their bodies to the illegal medicinal tiger bone market. In A Tigers Tale, Richard Farinato, spokesperson for the Human Society of the United States (HSUS), guesses the state of Texas has 3,000 tigers. Carole Baskin's Internet opinion piece, Can't Own 3 Dogs But You Can Own a Tiger, says 2,000 tigers are in Texas. Baskin exhibits exotic cats retired from her breeding operation. Baskin allegedly does not know the USDA monitors tigers, even though she uses USDA records to maintain an excel database of tigers. The Houston Examiner, a site where anyone can sign up to be a "reporter" ran Tigers and Other Big Cats in Texas, which credits National Geographic with estimating 15,000 big cats are in private homes, and attributes the SPCA with estimating Houston has 500 big cats. To investigate the incredible Texas tiger claims, Culver contacted the Houston SPCA to learn more about Houston's problem with big cats. SPCA public relations spokesperson Merra Nandlal, hired a year prior to Robyn Broyle's "investigation" for her Houston Examiner story, has no knowledge of this SPCA estimate. Nandlal told the FCF, "In the last three years the Houston SPCA has temporarily housed two tigers confiscated near Waco, and one other confiscated tiger, also from western Texas." Colleen Hodges, public relations person for Harris County, which surrounds Houston, told the FCF, "Twenty years ago Harris County was farm and ranch land, but now, it is mostly subdivisions, with deed restrictions. Couples have two jobs, and kids in daycare, they don't have tigers." But according to Harris County animal control field supervisor, Danny Sanchez, there are actually three tigers registered with the county, owned by two people. "In the past 10 years," Sanchez says, "another 5 or 6 people have had wild cats." South of Houston, in Brazoria County, animal control deputy officer Amanda Kaylor has six people registered with felines, mostly servals, no tigers, and one cougar. "In the past, there was one tiger, but it passed away," says Kaylor, adding, "and one time there was a pair of unregistered tigers, but the owner removed them." North of Houston, Joe Guidry, Montgomery County animal control field supervisor, has three tigers registered at a single facility. Says Guidry, "The facility used to have more animals, but they have gotten old and passed on." Guidry doesn't believe there are any tigers hiding in Montgomery County, explaining, "With 473,000 residents, someone would complain." According to Chambers County animal control officer Leslie Richie there are no tigers living in her county, but she vaguely remembers a single tiger cub, "Somewhere in Jefferson County, near Beaumont, about a decade ago." Jefferson County animal control has no tigers, but suggested FCF look in Galveston County. In 2008, Hurricane Ike hit Galveston. Tiger and lion owner, Michael Ray Kujawa, made national news when he brought his lion with him to a local church to ride out the storm. After the devastation by Ike, the big cats were relocated out of state. Galveston County assistant district prosecuting attorney Elizabeth Cuchens says, "No tigers are registered and there are no neighbor complaints of tigers either." USDA Animal Care Inspector Charlie Currer reports that in the Houston area, only two Harris County facilities have tigers, and no USDA licensed facilities have tigers in neighboring West Bend, Brazoria, Montgomery or Galveston County. In the early 1990%u2019s Currer had about 50 facilities with wild felines, but says big cats are not in Texas anymore. %u201CCounties have really, really cracked down on possession of big cats. People have to pay a lot of money, get insurance, and comply with a lot of regulations. Most of them just gave up their animals.%u201D Currer doesn%u2019t believe people are hiding tigers, saying, %u201CThe large cats are difficult to conceal, they are not like a serval you can keep in the house.%u201D In Marion County one neighbor complaint is familiar to the FCF. A month after arriving with tigers, leopards, and a cougar, a neighbor reported the unregistered owner to authorities. With the help of the FCF Wild Cat Safety Net Fund the cats were relocated to Wisconsin. Wild Animal Orphanage (WAO), one of the largest sanctuaries in Texas, has dissolved. The FCF Wild Cat Safety Net paid the fuel bills to transport 13 WAO tigers to Indiana, where they joined more than 100 other tigers at the Exotic Feline Rescue Center. FCF is very concerned having documented that the true tiger count is much less than the unsubstantiated claims reported by unidentified "experts." Culver says, "FCF is committed to protecting tigers and their habitat. Captive reared tigers are feline ambassadors that raise public awareness of conservation issues, and possess genetic diversity that could someday save this species from extinction." The Feline Conservation Federation is an international non-profit organization of zoos, sanctuaries, breeders, educational exhibitors, private owners and researchers. With more than 50 years feline husbandry experience, the FCF is a leading force in captive breeding, public education, wild feline conservation, and, is the expert on the number of tigers in America.

Lynn C. February 9, 2012 at 10:06 pm

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