Pet lovers eagerly gathered around a container to snap photos of meerkats at a Beijing animal fair, each selling for US$320, while nearby a raccoon nervously paced in a cage only slightly bigger than itself.
Throngs of people from across China packed into the cavernous exhibition halls for the annual pet fair, where exotic animals are a more common sight than cats or dogs.
The exotic pet industry is experiencing rapid growth with a market nearing 10 billion yuan (US$1.45 billion), Chinese state media have said.
Photo: AFP
Approximately 17.07 million people in China have exotic pets, Xinhua reported last year, and animal rights groups have raised concerns about welfare standards.
Unconventional pets are particularly popular among young people, with videos on how to raise them widely shared on social media platforms.
An 18-year-old putting down a deposit for a meerkat said he was confident it would be easier to raise the animal than his previous cats and dogs.
Photo: AFP
“I feel that raising exotic pets is really just child’s play by comparison,” said Xiong, who had travelled to Beijing from Jiangxi province.
He had previously bought a sugar glider — a nocturnal palm-sized possum sold at the same store — and said he found raising exotic pets easier as they did not feel separation anxiety as dogs do.
It was “quite a hassle-free” experience, Xiong said.
“When you want to interact, it’s happy to engage with you, but when you’re not in the mood, it’s perfectly content playing by itself,” he said.
REPTILIAN REPORT
In another part of the fair, patterned snakes and spotted geckos squirmed in round plastic containers as people shopped for their latest reptile.
Yang Xurui brought his green Argentine snake to the fair, where he said he was searching for new exotic pets.
“I consider her a friend of mine,” said Yang, 24, caressing the slithering creature hanging around his neck.
“Every day, the moment I walk through the door, she stands tall and straight like a giant green onion to welcome me home,” he added.
“She keeps me company while I watch TV, and then, come evening, she goes off to bed on her own — marking the end of our day together.”
Yang said he feels a certain sense of responsibility to dispel commonplace fear of snakes as pets.
“I want to tell everyone that she isn’t terrible, that she isn’t something to be feared.”
China’s Ministry of State Security has warned against the exotic pet craze it says is driven by trend-seekers.
“The trade, rearing, medical treatment, and abandonment of these exotic animals harbor latent safety risks,” it said last year, adding that this warrants “serious attention.”
Animal welfare regulations, however, remain lax in China, where pets such as fish, birds and pigs are commonly sold even in shopping malls. The pandemic, meanwhile, sparked fears that animals may be carriers of diseases including Covid-19, which was widely believed to have originated in bats.
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE
Authorities in China should target the traders, breeders and retailers who depend on the business — and its expansion — for profit, said Peter Li, a specialist in China’s animal protection policy at the University of Houston-Downtown.
Businesses engaged in the sale and transport of exotic animals have reportedly used fraudulent labeling, withheld critical information and engaged in deliberate deception to move these animals through supply chains, Li said.
Abandoned exotic species can reproduce rapidly in the wild, creating significant ecological pressures on local environments, while diseases carried by them could pose public health risks, he said.
Public awareness in China regarding wildlife protection has improved significantly, but some consumers of exotic pets still lack sufficient knowledge before purchasing such animals, conservation charity WWF said.
“Some consumers may not be fully aware of which species are legal to own, whether specific permits are required the varying levels of care difficulty for different species, long-term financial costs,” it added.
At the fair, 26-year-old Zhang Yue agreed that bringing certain animals “into human-inhabited environments could lead to various repercussions.”
Nevertheless, Zhang said she would still consider owning a sugar glider as they are “absolutely adorable.”
What was the population of Taiwan when the first Negritos arrived? In 500BC? The 1st century? The 18th? These questions are important, because they can contextualize the number of babies born last month, 6,523, to all the people on Taiwan, indigenous and colonial alike. That figure represents a year on year drop of 3,884 babies, prefiguring total births under 90,000 for the year. It also represents the 26th straight month of deaths exceeding births. Why isn’t this a bigger crisis? Because we don’t experience it. Instead, what we experience is a growing and more diverse population. POPULATION What is Taiwan’s actual population?
After Jurassic Park premiered in 1993, people began to ask if scientists could really bring long-lost species back from extinction, just like in the hit movie. The idea has triggered “de-extinction” debates in several countries, including Taiwan, where the focus has been on the Formosan clouded leopard (designated after 1917 as Neofelis nebulosa brachyura). National Taiwan Museum’s (NTM) Web site describes the Formosan clouded leopard as “a subspecies endemic to Taiwan…it reaches a body length of 0.6m to 1.2m and tail length of 0.7m to 0.9m and weighs between 15kg and 30kg. It is entirely covered with beautiful cloud-like spots
For the past five years, Sammy Jou (周祥敏) has climbed Kinmen’s highest peak, Taiwu Mountain (太武山) at 6am before heading to work. In the winter, it’s dark when he sets out but even at this hour, other climbers are already coming down the mountain. All of this is a big change from Jou’s childhood during the Martial Law period, when the military requisitioned the mountain for strategic purposes and most of it was off-limits. Back then, only two mountain trails were open, and they were open only during special occasions, such as for prayers to one’s ancestors during Lunar New Year.
March 23 to March 29 Kao Chang (高長) set strict rules for his descendants: women were to learn music or cooking, and the men medicine or theology. No matter what life path they chose, they were to use their skills in service of the Presbyterian Church and society. As a result, musical ability — particularly in Western instruments — was almost expected among the Kao women, and even those who married into the family often had musical training. Although the men did not typically play instruments, they played a supporting role, helping to organize music programs such as children’s orchestras, writes