Vince Covino, SeaQuest’s founder, says that animals are still more content at SeaQuest’s facilities, often located at indoor shopping centers. They live in an environment that is temperature controlled, where they’re fed on a schedule, and they don’t have to deal with environmental hazards in the wild.
“When people come to understand that, then they realize, ‘Oh, I see why they do better in malls,’” he says.
At Sloth Encounters on Long Island in New York, people could pay $50 to pet and hold sloths. Last March, officials forced the business to close after the Humane Society conducted an undercover investigation. They recorded video of crowded habitats and a staff member hitting a sloth. The owner, Larry Wallach, previously exhibited tiger cubs. He received federal citations for their mistreatment. He is still promoting home visits with the sloths on social media and says they are well cared for.
“As long as everything is captive-bred, I don’t see a problem,” he says. “All my sloths are handleable.”
No matter where the creatures are bred, some animal ethicists argue that there’s no way for wild animals to tell us if they like being touched. Does an otter really want to sit on an 8-year-old’s lap?
Zoos and other institutions depend on human involvement to protect their animals and to understand the urgent need for conservation. But, says Gray of Zoos Victoria, that doesn’t give humans free rein to do as they please with wildlife in captivity.
“You don’t have to touch every animal,” Gray says, “to feel in love with animals.”