BBC Wildlife - UK (2021-12)

(Maropa) #1

C


urrently, if I so wished,
I could walk into my local
pet shop and buy a monkey.
I wouldn’t need to get a
licence, there would be no
home check, and I probably wouldn’t even
be asked how I would care for it. Where do I
live? Manchester.
In the UK it is currently - and shockingly


  • still perfectly legal to buy 85 species of
    monkey as easily as one might buy a goldfish.
    Yet, thankfully, this is about to change,
    thanks to a new Animal Welfare Bill that is
    making its way through parliament.
    Though not an outright ban, the new
    legislation is set to make private ownership
    of primates much more difficult and highly
    regulated, by requiring anyone who wishes to
    sell or own one to have a licence. Once these
    regulations come into force - likely by 2024 -
    breaches will be subject to heavy fines.
    That there even is a primate pet trade in
    the UK may come as a surprise. But, sadly, it
    is very much a reality, is large and growing,
    and has led to many animals living in misery.
    The monkey I would likely buy would be
    a marmoset. These highly social creatures are
    the most commonly kept primates in the UK,
    making up about 80 per cent of the trade.
    It is thought that these are mostly bred
    here in the UK by dealers. In fact, Monkey
    World, the Dorset-based zoo and primate
    rescue centre, has found that 70 per cent of
    the marmosets they have rescued are male,
    and that even those sold as females are often
    actually males. This suggests that breeders
    are holding onto the females in order to
    breed from them.
    The other 20 per cent of the trade
    consists of a mix of species, some legal,
    some definitely not. Monkey World has
    taken 14 species of primate from the UK
    pet trade into its care since 1989. As well as
    marmosets, it has rescued spider monkeys,
    ring-tailed lemurs and even a chimpanzee,


ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Leoma Williams is a science
writer and PhD student at the
University of Manchester.
She studies group behaviours
in social animals, including
primates and corvids, hoping
to discover more about how social
groups work together in the face of
competing interests.

ANIMAL WELFARE O


discoverwildlife.com BBC WILDLIFE 51

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