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Air Date: Week of July 12, 1996
CURWOOD: It's Living on Earth. I'm Steve Curwood. Once upon a time
your average American family might have been made up of a mom, a
dad, three or four children, a couple of cats and a dog.
Today the family's as likely to be a single parent, one kid, and
a boa constrictor or an iguana. Our choices of pets change with
our culture, and today exotic pets are hot. Chinchillas, ferrets,
hedgehogs, macaws. You name it and you can probably get it. Of course,
this demand for unusual pets can cause problems. The populations
of many endangered animals have been decimated by the illegal wildlife
trade. And even when exotic animals are legally imported or bred,
unprepared owners can be in for a rude awakening. To find out which
exotic animals can be bought legally and which make the best pets,
I headed out to the Pet Club in Dedham, Massachusetts, with zoologist
Donna Fernandes.
(Bird chirps up and under)
CURWOOD: Dr. Fernandes led me first to a swarm of parakeets, a
long-time favorite.
FERNANDES: They are highly social. Parakeets do make excellent
pets. If you wanted to get a bird, parakeets would be a good choice
because they have been bred so long for pets that they are very
used to the kind of domestic situation that most households provide.
That would certainly be a bird that I would recommend.
CURWOOD: Okay. Well, let's meet this fellow over here. Now a moment
ago he hopped, uh, right on our microphone. And this is a macaw?
FERNANDES: Yes. And they're very popular, some of these parrots,
in that group. Macaws and cockatoos and things.
(Bird calls continue)
CURWOOD: These guys are quite the character. He has a neighbor
here and they're both watching us very carefully.
FERNANDES: Yeah. I can see in some ways why they would be attractive,
in that they do vocalize and they can mimic human voice. So you
can teach a lot of the members of the parrot family to talk, as
it were. Another thing to think about when you're considering a
macaw is how long-lived they are. They can live 75 years or so.
So you have to better be thinking about willing this to your children.
It's not something that you can just sort of have for a few years
and then it's going to pass away. It's a very long-term commitment.
And also a lot of work to keep them active and happy.
CURWOOD: Any special consideration with the macaws? Do you have
to keep their wings clipped, or --
FERNANDES: Most people do clip their primary feathers, which are
their principal flight feathers. And that way they can move around
but they can't take off and fly. Another thing you often have to
do is cut their toenails. That can be a little stressful if you
don't know what you're doing [birds screech in the background] but
because they don't get the sort of natural activity and wear that
they would in the wild, they can get overgrown, and nails have to
be clipped. And even beaks have to be trimmed down. Again, they're
not getting the normal activities that would cause them. They typically
don't have to break down their food and crack nuts any more, so
they don't get the normal wear and tear. So you have to come in
and trim their beak down. So it's a lot of work, and you have to
know what you're doing, because they can get stressed out if you
don't treat them properly.
CURWOOD: This is quite a loud crowd over here.
(Birds screech)
CURWOOD: I'm wondering what we have over here. Now these guys have
sort of -- well, they look like rabbits but their ears are a little
short and their tails are kinda long.
FERNANDES: Yeah, these are chinchillas. If you want to give a lot
of attention to a chinchilla they'll do okay as a pet. They're very
shy, so you can't just sort of jump in there and expect them to
respond to you. You have to really get them very used to you and
handle them very gently. And they have certain requirements; they
have to have a dust bath every day so you have to provide a cage
large enough to incorporate several features into their home.
CURWOOD: A dust bath?
FERNANDES: Yeah. They sort of clean themselves kicking up this
gray dust. It's what they do sort of with soil in nature and they
really need to do that.
CURWOOD: So what kind of person really would like a chinchilla,
do you think?
FERNANDES: Um, well, I think sort of a quiet person. A lot of elderly
now are getting chinchillas and rabbits because there is scientific
evidence that responding and touching mammals, small animals, can
lower your blood pressure and heart rate and has positive health
benefits. So that's why we are going into nursing homes on our education
programs with a lot of these types of animals.
CURWOOD: Where are chinchillas from?
FERNANDES: Chinchillas are from South America, but they are pretty
plentiful because they are captive bred. Techniques established
of course during the fur trade, so they are pretty much available.
(Birds screech)
CURWOOD: Now, when I think of an exotic pet -- somebody having
something that somebody else doesn't have on the block, I think
of -- reptiles, you know, snakes or iguanas or some kind of lizard.
So tell me about these, uh, these fellows here.
FERNANDES: Well, iguanas have increased in popularity tremendously
within the last 5 or 10 years. They also pose very -- interesting
problems you have to solve if you get an iguana. Their diet changes.
When they're young they eat insects. And then as they get older
they switch to fruits and vegetables, and I think a lot of people
don't realize that and their iguanas die during that growth period
when they switch over from their diet. They need very specific lighting
requirements, full spectrum lighting, in order to synthesize several
vitamins which they need. And people don't keep them under the appropriate
lighting. And also, with an iguana, you should very much think about
its
ultimate size. I wish pet stores would include a fully grown adult
specimen in their exhibitry, because I think if people saw a 5-foot
iguana they would think twice about getting, you know, 8-inch baby
iguana.
CURWOOD: Five -- foot -- iguana?
FERNANDES: Yes. They do get quite large, and -- and again, they
can be handled, even at that size, if you invest the time in working
with them, and if you want a pet iguana just understand you may
have to devote half of one of your rooms at home to its ultimate
cage if you really want to do right by the animal.
CURWOOD: Uh huh. Now what do we have here? We have two snakes together
kind of in a snake dance
FERNANDES: Oh, this entire exhibit is filled with boas. Boas are
probably the most popular animal. I think about half of all reptiles
brought into this country are boas. Supposedly, you know, current
estimates are that about one million live reptiles come into the
international pet trade each year, and about 300 to 500,000 of those
end up in the United States, and they're often caught as small,
young animals, and then they get to be quite, quite big animals.
And there are requirements in some states, like Massachusetts, that
if you have a snake over 8 feet long you need a special permit.
And usually we get requests of finding a home for about a 7-foot,
8-foot snake. Just as they're getting really big, people are tired
of them and there are some herpetological societies which will try
to find homes for these animals. But again, you should really understand
how long they live, how big they get. And also some of the hazards
they can pose. They won't necessarily recognize that your pet rabbit
is your pet rabbit and not food.
CURWOOD: And how do you take care of a boa constrictor?
FERNANDES: Well, they'll eat -- live prey. Mice when they're younger,
pinkies, which are baby mice, and then rats when they're older.
And that's, you know, that's a big economic consideration. You have
to every week go to the pet store, or some individuals then decide
they want to raise the mice, so then you've got a whole entire colony
of mice that you're keeping to feed your snake. So it can be quite
an economic consideration as well as time consuming to keep the
food available.
CURWOOD: And in other words, it's just easier to go with a cat
or a dog, huh?
FERNANDES: A cat or a dog, or parakeets. Mice make actually nice
pets. Domesticated rabbits. There are a lot of animals that are
used to being handled, respond well to human contact, have very
simple husbandry, and are not super expensive to keep. And have,
you know, a life span of 8 to 10 years.
CURWOOD: And are as much fun?
FERNANDES: Oh, equally as much fun. I mean I love my dog probably
more than my skink or my tarantula.
CURWOOD: [Laughs] Okay. Dr. Donna Fernandes is former vice president
for programs at Boston's Franklin Park Zoo, and she's associate
curator at the Wildlife Conservation Society in New York City. Thanks,
Donna, for joining us.
FERNANDES: Thank you very much.
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