5.5 billion wild animals kept in cruel conditions around the world

Whether it's for entertaining tourists or to harvest their bones, across the world billions of wild animals are being exploited for profit.

A shocking new report revealed that 5.5 billion wild animals from 487 different species are being kept in cruel conditions, creating a massive risk for both humans and animals.

From lion farms in South Africa to Thailand's elephant 'sanctuaries', the report highlights the shocking cruelty behind this multi-billion pound industry.

Researchers from WAP analysed online records from around the world to determine the extent of wild animal farming.

Records listed online suggested that there were between 936,321,047 and 963,711,547 wild animals being farmed between 2000 and 2020.

Requests to government authorities revealed a further 858,743 wild animals from 28 different species between 2021 and 2022, despite many authorities not responding.

However, the officially reported numbers are expected to only be a small fraction of the total number.

Based on the available data, the researchers estimated figures for countries where data was sparse or unavailable.

Although World Animal Protection stresses that this is a 'very rudimentary calculation', they estimate the true figure could be around 5.5 billion animals farmed worldwide.

Mr Stewart said: 'Given that the industry is so opaque and all the obstacles we came up against trying to get hold of that research, we think 5.5 billion is probably conservative.'

While the global wildlife farming industry breeds hundreds of different species, the researchers highlight three in particular: bears, elephants, and lions.

Black bears, sun bears, and grizzly bears are all farmed in cruel conditions for the bile produced in their gallbladders which is highly prized in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM).

The researchers found records for more than 24,000 bears in farms across China, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and South Korea.

However, the practice is most common in China where farms are operated by large pharmaceutical companies in an industry worth more than $1 billion.

Before Covid, Chinese farms held more than 20,000 bears and employed between 5,000 and 6,000 people.

To extract the bile, bears undergo surgery to create a 'free-dripping fistula' which is a catheter inserted into the gallbladder so that it can be drained daily.

The process is painful and prone to infection, leading to many bears dying or being fitted with 'iron corsets' to stop them from scratching or biting the wound.

The conditions for bears are so bad that research describes 'sores, skin conditions, parasites, hair loss, bone deformities, injuries, swollen limbs, dental and breathing problems, diarrhoea and scarring.'

Bears are also declawed and even sometimes have their teeth removed to stop them harming farmers and themselves.

Lions, meanwhile, are primarily farmed in South Africa where they are used in the tourism and TCM industries.

WAP research suggests that there are currently 7,979 lions being farmed at 366 facilities across South Africa.

Lion cubs are used in petting and 'lion walk' experiences until they become too old and too dangerous to be around humans.

Once this happens they are used in 'canned hunts' in which wealthy tourists pay for trophy hunting experiences with the trapped animals.

Then, after they are dead, their bones and body parts are sold for their use in TCM.

These lions are kept in cramped conditions, with little attention paid to their dietary and medical needs.

And in the off-season, when tourism dries up, the conditions can become even worse as the lions are underfed to save money.

Inbreeding and excessive pregnancies are also common, leading to birth defects and congenital health issues that leave many lions living shortened, unhealthy lives.

Unlike lions, bears, and many other wild animals, elephants are not mainly bred for their body parts but for their role in the tourism industry.

'These are long-lived, intelligent animals that are farmed or bred in captivity for arguably the most frivolous of the industries: the wildlife entertainment industry' said Mr Stewart.

Tourists pay large sums of money to take part in elephant riding or bathing experiences at sites across South East Asia.

It is believed that the 2,798 captive elephants in Thailand generate between $581 million and $770 million (£460m-£609m) each year.

With the price of a single elephant at $50,000 (£39,545), poaching and cross-border smuggling of wild elephants have been incentivised.

Although the industry has recently pivoted towards more captive breeding, the number of captive elephants in Thailand increased by 134 per cent between 2010 and 2020.

Undercover footage captured between 2018 and 2020 revealed how baby elephants are trained to meet the demands of the tourism industry.

The footage shows how elephants are bound with chains and ropes to learn to submit to human instruction or face punishment.

The elephant handlers (Mahouts) used a bullhook, stick, and even nails to inflict pain on the baby elephant during two sessions every day.

The abuse is so bad that some researchers have suggested that many Thai elephants suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.

However, Mr Stewart stresses: 'The elephant trainers and mahouts are not to blame here, the blame is on the industry that is creating the demand for trained elephants.

'They carry out what the tourist industry demands of them: To produce elephants that can safely be used for rides, shows, and tourist attractions.'

Mr Stewart notes a specific resort in Thailand, Nong Nooch Pattaya Garden, where tourists can pay to attend elephant shows.

He said: 'It now has over 70 elephants in captivity and five baby elephants were just born last year, each of those may well outlive any of us.

'That is a lot of years of suffering to prop up half a million dollars or more of exploitation annually.'

Despite the huge risks posed to animals by wildlife farming, little has been done to clamp down on the industry.

Many countries openly encourage the practice as a lucrative source of income or turn a blind eye to cases where the rules are broken.

In 2019, South Africa passed an amendment to the Animal Improvement Act which reclassified 33 wild animals - including lions, cheetahs, giraffes, rhinos and zebras - as 'production livestock', meaning they are technically classed as farm animals.

China, meanwhile, has begun to crack down on the sale of wild animals for meat but still allows the farming of wild animals for their furs.

And, at the international level, the trade in wildlife and wildlife-derived products continues almost unabated.

The researchers claim that a big reason more isn't done to limit international trade is a mistaken impression that wildlife farming is good for conservation.

However, Mr Stewart and other experts believe that this argument is fundamentally false.

He said: 'In reality, the supply from farming is fueling demand because it's putting a price tag on wild animals and perpetuating the social acceptability of wildlife exploitation more generally.'