Our sanctuary team knows the true cost of a pet monkey, and those costs are borne for a lifetime by the monkeys themselves.... The only way in which to ensure healthy and happy monkeys is to protect them in their natural habitats and to ban the cruel trade in primates as pets.
A few days ago, the global news outlet, The Sun, published
an instructional article for anyone interested in buying a pet
monkey. The article outlines apparent financial costs, along with
the states in which a person can legally own a monkey, plus the
journalist’s take on care requirements. With the potential to reach
hundreds of thousands of readers, it is perhaps one of the most
irresponsible and ill-informed pieces of journalism I have seen on
this issue in the almost two decades I have worked in this field.
To repeat the advice provided in the article would be to give it
credence, which we will not do here, but suffice to say, it was not
written from a position of knowledge and experience.
Having rehomed a painfully thin, anemic, and chronically stressed
little monkey from this cruel trade just last week, as well as
having cared for other victims of this trade for decades, our
sanctuary team knows the true cost of a pet monkey, and those costs
are borne for a lifetime by the monkeys themselves.
1. A life of loneliness: Monkeys are sentient,
emotionally complex, social animals who have long weaning periods
and would naturally live in multi-generational, multi-familial
troops made up of dozens, and sometimes hundreds, of individuals.
Pet monkeys live lonely lives in cages, often never seeing another
monkey from the moment they are torn from their mothers at just a
few weeks old.
2. A life of stress: Kiki, a vervet monkey who
arrived at our sanctuary last week, is suffering from chronic
stress. This is extremely common in monkeys kept as pets and can
result in long-term physical and emotional consequences. Charlie, a
monkey who we rescued from the pet trade in 2019, passed away
suddenly at just seven years old. His necropsy showed us that the
reason for his death was the cumulation of years of extreme stress
due to his unnatural and solitary life as a pet.
Many pet monkeys demonstrate signs of stress in what are known as
stereotypic behaviors. These are functionless, repetitive behaviors
that might include obsessive pacing, overgrooming, or even
self-harm. A baboon who lives at our sanctuary, Betsy, had part of
her hand amputated after she chewed off one of her own fingers. She
later had part of her tail amputated for the same reason.
3. A life of ill-health: Few vets have experience
of caring for primates and few people have enough knowledge of them
to even recognize when they are sick. Kiki arrived to us very
underweight and with anemia. Other monkeys develop diabetes as a
direct result of the poor diet that they are fed by their “owners.”
Many monkeys never see a vet and many more die premature deaths, as
health issues are unnoticed or ignored.
4. A life without a happy ending: Monkeys bred for
the pet trade in the United States have no chance to later be
rehabilitated and released to the wild. They will spend their entire
lives in captivity – a situation that goes against all their natural
instincts and denies them many of their needs as wild animals. Even
the luckier ones who are rehomed to sanctuaries like ours will live
a limited life, carrying with them the trauma of their past. We aim
to provide the best possible life for the monkeys under our care,
but we know that even the largest of enclosures, the best efforts to
provide them with stimulation, friendship, and the best husbandry
and veterinary care is still far less than the life they deserve.
The only way in which to ensure healthy and happy monkeys is to
protect them in their natural habitats and to ban the cruel trade in
primates as pets. Thankfully, and despite irresponsible articles
such as that in The Sun, the UK has confirmed in recent
weeks its plan to ban most private ownership of primates and, here
in the U.S., the Captive Primate Safety Act has been introduced in
both the House and the Senate. If successful, the bill will ban
private ownership of primates, as well as public interaction with
primates in zoos and other public places.
The cost of a pet monkey? Financially expensive to the owner, and
utterly devastating to the monkey. Please never buy a primate as a
pet and support our work to end this cruel trade for good.