Horrific training techniques ensure the animals are submissive enough to perform tricks, spend their long lives chained, and give rides to paying tourists.
Abused for profit
Wild animals used for entertainment are abused and mistreated for profit.
Dolphins in marine parks live in tanks on average 200,000 times smaller than their natural home range. Many were captured from the wild and taken from their families and social groups (also called “pods”) or bred in captivity and traded among several marine parks.
Tiger and lion cubs are taken from their mothers (sometimes at only one month old) and are chained to or left in small, barren cages for tourists to handle and hug for selfies. Some big cat facilities drug the animals when they get older to force them to cooperate. When they become unmanageable, they are abandoned or discarded at roadside zoos.
Elephants are taken from their mothers as babies, beaten, and subjected to ongoing physical and psychological abuse during training otherwise known as “the crush.” Horrific training techniques ensure the animals are submissive enough to perform tricks, spend their long lives chained, and give rides to paying tourists.