Tanya Tucker, in partnership with the Animal Legal Defense Fund, penned an open letter that details âabuse and neglectâ she witnessed during a recent trip to the Special Memories Zoo in Greenville, Wis.
Areas of concern that Tanya mentioned include animals housed in filthy enclosures, lack of drinking water and food contaminated with fecal matter. Tanya also noted a number of possibly injured animals, including an endangered Bengal tiger, numerous birds and a giraffe.
âThe zoo has moral and legal obligations to the animals who are confined and put on display but did not seem to care at all about these animalsâ well-being,â said Tanya. âThis situation has opened my eyes to the need for stronger laws to ensure captive and wild animals are properly cared for. We need better oversight of those who keep wild animals captive. We need more scrutiny over who is permitted to âownâ wild animals.â
Tanya is urging the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to investigate the conditions and take action to ensure the animals get the care they need. In addition, concerned individuals can contact the USDA on Tanyaâs behalf and urge the organization to investigate the zoo.
You can read Tanyaâs open letter below.
To Whom it May Concern:
Recently, I witnessed the shocking and inhumane treatment of animals, including endangered species, at the Special Memories Zoo in Greenville, Wisconsin. I am writing this letter to alert local media, families, schools and anyone who may consider a visit to the Special Memories Zoo. Most importantly, I am asking for help to protect the zooâs precious animals. It genuinely felt like we were walking through an animal hospice.
Then the reptile room was so filthy, and the stench was so overwhelming, it took our breath away. Plus, I did not see water in any of the animalsâ cages.
Somebody has to take action, and I do not want to wait around while more abuse takes place.
As you might already know, I am a music artist and not an animal expert. But I do enjoy going to see animals, and I thought it would be a nice experience to go to the zoo with my children and members of my band while on a day off.
I am very glad I did, because that visit alerted me to the extremely poor conditions in which this zooâs animals are keptâtruly horrific, and impossible not to see and notice. The treatment of the animals was nothing close to humane. Both in terms of their environment and their health, the animals seemed neglected to the point of abuse.
I was excited to see âTanya,â an endangered Bengal tiger who I was told was named after me. But it appeared Tanyaâs leg was broken. When I raised this concern with the zookeeper, her response was, âOh sheâs just faking it.â This did not seem like a reasonable or truthful response, or explanation. Animals donât just âfake it.â
âTanya,â the tiger, wasnât the only animal whose condition surprised and alarmed me. The pitiful Siberian bears were sitting in and surrounded by mounds of their own feces. In addition, the lionsâalso endangered speciesâwere confined in a very small cage. There was some food in the cage, that zoo staff told me was raw meatâbut it did not look like meat, and the lions did not touch it the entire time I was there.
The jaguar was so clearly frightened and was foaming at the mouth. The 5-year-old giraffe was confined to such a small space and was pacing constantly. This giraffe also appeared to have massive tumors right behind his front legs.
The bird room had several birds with what appeared to be broken wings. When asked about them, the zookeeper told me she couldnât do anything for them and was not concerned in the least. The birds were just lying on the cage floor and to me it looked like they were dying slowly.
I am also concerned that the zoo is not sufficiently staffed. We met the zooâs two owners and one zookeeper, but they were not attending to the animals. In fact, my entire time at Special Memories we never saw one person or caregiver with any of the animals. Plus, three people cannot take care of that many wild animals.
The zoo has moral and legal obligations to the animals who are confined and put on display but did not seem to care at all about these animalsâ well-being.
I play a lot of concerts in Wisconsin. I love its warm friendly peopleâand I believe if they knew what was going on, they wouldnât tolerate it. I know what I saw, and I know it needs changing.
This situation has opened my eyes to the need for stronger laws to ensure captive and wild animals are properly cared for. We need better oversight of those who keep wild animals captive. We need more scrutiny over who is permitted to âownâ wild animals.
I am now urging the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to investigate the conditions at the Special Memories Zooâand take action to ensure the animals get the diet and veterinary care they require. Join me in contacting the USDA by visiting www.aldf.org/HelpTanya.
This is where Iâm starting, but it wonât be where I stop. I am a singer. I am just one voice. I am using that voice to speak up for these animals.
If the animals canât be cared for properly, they should be left where they belong in the wild or with people that have the knowledge and means to properly care for themâso our children can gain knowledge from their visit and not sadness.
Very concerned and heartbroken,
Tanya Tucker
Nashville, Tennessee
photo by Arroyo/O\âConnor, AFF-USA.com