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Issues Surrounding Privately Purchasing and Breeding Tigers in the U.S.

Private ownership of wild tigers creates health issues for the animals and doesn't help conservation, since it's nearly impossible to confirm their lineages.

By Riley Davis
Jul 23, 2022 1:00 PM
Captive tiger
(Credit: Elina Litovkina/Shutterstock)

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The Netflix series, Tiger King, gave us an unprecedented look into the world of backyard zoos and tiger trade in the spring of 2020. The show demonstrated how people used and abused tigers for fanfare and profit, and how many facilities and breeders were ill-equipped to provide proper health and nutrition to the big cats.

But America’s backyard tiger problem existed long before it was sensationalized on television, and it’s unclear how extensive the practice of illegally keeping tigers really is. According to a BBC article, there may be more captive tigers in the U.S. than collectively remain in the wild.

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