The trouble with trophy cats
![f0058-01](https://article-imgs.scribdassets.com/7h6tsjqxfk9ud8oo/images/fileOOIESB2N.jpg)
IMAGINE FOR A MOMENT THAT THE UK was breeding wild wolves with poodles and selling their hybrid puppies on the internet. Sound a bit ‘off ’ for a nation of animal-lovers aspiring to be world leaders in animal welfare? Yet here we are in the 21st century with a growing legal trade in breeding exotic wild cats with domestics to create ‘trophy’ pets.
Savannah cats are a cross between a serval (a wild felid found in Africa) and a domestic cat. They sell for vast sums of money, but owning such an animal comes with a host of challenges that can result in harm to children, native wildlife, and to the cats themselves.
The story of the savannah cat started back in 1986, in Pennsylvania, USA, when a male serval bred with a domestic Siamese. Bengals and chausies, the equivalent hybrids of leopard and jungle cats respectively, were already on the scene by this time (see box on p61). However, it wasn’t until 2001 that The International Cat Association formally adopted the savannah breed, enabling it to
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days