Ball python is small glass container

Wild capture, pet expos and our homes: Ball pythons are suffering

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One of the most popular exotic pet choices, Ball pythons are confined to glass tanks in homes around the world. Here's why you should reconsider owning one.

Guest blog by Cassandra Koenen, international head of Wildlife. Not Pets campaign

Today, hundreds of millions of birds, mammals, fish and reptiles are traded worldwide as exotic pets. 

In many ways, the ball python is the poster child of the exotic pet trade.

It’s the single most traded live animal legally exported from Africa under CITES. Over the past two years, we have been researching and investigating the global systems that prop up this industry and subject ball pythons to a life of cruelty and suffering.

 

A Ball python slides over a white background

The cruelty of wildlife commerce

Reptiles are thought to make up around 20% of the global exotic pet trade, yet they are some of the most misunderstood species. Many people believe they are not sentient, and think they are unable to feel positive and negative emotions.

Because they are less like people than cats or dogs in both biology and behaviour, it’s harder for us to relate to them. They aren’t cute and cuddly, so we tend to assign a different value to them.

This often leads owners to misjudge the level of care they need and fail to meet even their minimum needs with respect to space, nutrition, environment and enrichment.

A seller at a reptile expo sits behind a display of 3 rows of clear plastic boxes containing snakes.

Exotic pets myths and reality

Many people believe that reptiles, like ball pythons, do not need specialist care and are great starter pets that require little care and attention and they do not feel positive and negative emotions.

The reality is that are far more complex than people often realise, with biology and behaviours that can only ever be fully met in the wild. They require specialised care to meet even minimum welfare requirements in captivity. False claims of their limited intelligence, emotional capacity, and minimal welfare needs can mean that they can suffer considerably.

The belief and trust in these myths results in the unintentional cruelty and neglect, of captive snakes. These myths are also often used to justify a massive global trade that threatens the survival of these animals in the wild.

Without proper care, ball pythons can experience stress, injury, malnutrition, disease, premature death, deformities and abnormalities created by selective breeding of morphs and failure to meet minimum standards for captivity (i.e. space, stimulation, water).

It is only in the wild that ball pythons can fully meet their biological needs and exhibit their natural instincts.

A bearded man wearing a baseball hat poses for a photo with a pet snake over his head.

The problem with ball python morphs

Ball pythons with specific colours or patterns — frequently referred to as ‘colour morphs’ — are increasingly popular with prospective snake owners, and many breeders are willing to selectively breed snakes in captivity to meet this demand.

But unfortunately for the snakes involved, there are several genetic disorders associated with the breeding of these morphs.

For example, ‘wobble head’ syndrome is a nervous system disorder that occurs in spider morph ball pythons. Symptoms include: side-to-side head tremors, lack of coordination, erratic corkscrewing of the head and neck, poor muscle tone, and loose tail grip.

Selective breeding can also cause spinal deformities, skull deformities, and ‘bug eyes.’

A breeder holds a Ball python up to the light. Behind him, several "racks" of drawers where the snakes are kept.

Exotic pet expo cruelty

At the exotic pet expos we’ve investigated in Canada, Netherlands, Spain, the US, and UK, 94% of the animals appeared to be captive bred morphs rather than snakes that were pulled directly from the wild.

Breeding and selling morphs is lucrative. Depending on characteristics, they can sell for tens of thousands of dollars.

If conversations with retailers are any indication, it’s possible that a very large proportion of ball pythons exported from Africa are being purchased by breeders to discover and breed new morphs, rather than selling directly to homes of potential pet owners.

By introducing wild caught snakes into the captive-breeding process, many unsuspecting owners may think they have purchased a captive-bred snake, not realising that their pet was quite possibly sourced directly from the wild or via ‘ranching’ operations in West Africa.

A variety of snakes are laid out on a table at an expo. They are curled up inside plastic tubs barely big enough to fit them.

Your health at risk from wildlife trade

The outbreak of the deadly novel coronavirus highlights how diseases can be transferred to humans from wild animals in the wildlife trade.

It’s important to note that snakes and other reptiles can become vectors of zoonotic diseases that can also make humans sick, while seeming perfectly healthy and unaffected themselves.

Once these animals are sold as pets, owners, and anyone who comes into contact with their pets, is at risk of contracting illnesses like salmonella. After a recent outbreak in Canada, it was revealed that several people had come into contact with pet snakes before they became ill.

Snakes sold at a wildlife market in Wuhan, China, were originally suspected as a potential source of COVID-19.

However, even if snakes are, as now seems likely, ‘innocent’ with respect to COVID-19, our visits to snake farms in West Africa revealed that these facilities do more than just feed the demand for ball pythons as pets.

They also act as wider trade hubs, exporting other wildlife too. Some of these species, like bats, civets and primates, are higher up the human health list of concern when considering their role in earlier epidemics such as SARs in 2002 and Ebola in 2013.

A group of children crowded around a table at an expo. A seller hands a small snake to a young girl, while others look at the snakes inside plastic boxes on the table.

Global problems require global solutions

Given the complexity of the trade chain for pythons from West Africa to other parts of the world, we need to disrupt the trade from many angles — from transportation and government agencies to online sales and pet shops.

Now is the time for people to stop buying and breeding wild animals as pets, and for governments, organisations and nations to unite to ban the global wildlife trade - to end the suffering of wild animals and to protect people.

It is time to turn the tide on the exotic pet trade and to stop buying and breeding wild animals as pets and keep wild animals in the wild, where they belong.

Governments, organisations and nations must unite to ban the global wildlife trade - to end the suffering of wild animals and to protect people.

A hunter in West Africa holds a wild Ball python he just caught. In the other hand, he hold the long wooden stick that is used during the hunt.

Editor's note: Ball pythons in the UK

Over the last decade, Ball python imports to the UK have largely been replaced by animals that have been captive-bred in the UK – imports now number in the hundreds in recent years, including captive-bred snakes from the US. Our Suffering in Silence report shows captive-bred snakes are not a cruelty-free alternative and the consumer demand for ‘morphs’ continues to drive exports to western markets.

Several rows of plastic displays at Doncaster Reptile Expo. Each display is a small plastic box containing a Ball python, not big enough for the animal to streth out.

 

References

We believe that credible, sound science must be the backbone of our efforts to move people to act for to improve the lives of millions of animals around the world. Below are links to many of the peer-reviewed research that underpins our work to end the trade in ball pythons as pets:

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Governments, organisations and nations must unite to ban the global wildlife trade - to end the suffering of wild animals and to protect people.