Costa Rica is known for its amazing and exotic wildlife: the country is home to diverse animals including sloths, jaguars, monkeys, toucans and parrots.
Recently, Costa Rica made an extraordinary and long-awaited move to protect its wildlife: they’re closing all their zoos.
The plan was first announced back in 2013.
“We don’t want animals in captivity or enclosed in any way unless it is to rescue or save them.”
While the idea to go cage-free was cheered by animal activists, it also proved to be controversial, as some questioned the practicality of releasing animals that have long lived in captivity.
There was also concern about the logistics of moving the animals to already-overcrowded wildlife rescues. “We have received so many animals this year that we have been forced to turn away animals,” Maria Pia Martin, wildlife veterinarian at rescue center, Kids Saving the Rainforest, told National Geographic.
Due to legal hurdles and a contract with Fundazoo, the plan to close the zoos was delayed a whole decade, but is now going into effect.
According to The Tico Times, 300 animals — including crocodiles, spider monkeys, a sloth and a jaguar — were loaded onto trucks and transferred out of the Simón Bolívar Zoo in San José, and relocated to a local refuge.
Official José Pablo Vázquez of the Ministry of Environment said that the various animals were examined before the transfer.
While the two state zoos have now closed, the law does not affect the 18 private zoos in Costa Rica.
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