After the deaths of Bosco the bear and Sissy the cougar at Pymatuning Deer Park, PETA keeps urging everyone to help the animals still suffering there.
PETA submitted four complaints against Tregembo Animal Park last year alone, and the USDA has finally taken action against the decrepit roadside zoo.
Waccatee Zoo was fined thousands by the USDA after inspectors found that, among other horrors, animals there were forced to drink cloudy, discolored water.
Years after “Doc” Antle shipped tigers to Thailand’s decrepit Samutprakan Crocodile Farm and Zoo, he gave Nat Geo his own twisted story about the facility.
PETA has alerted the USDA numerous times about elephant Asha’s mistreatment, as she’s suffered at Natural Bridge Zoo for decades after being abducted from her natural habitat as a baby.
Single parenting can be tough, but this widowed orangutan is nurturing and caring for his daughters.
For PETA’s 40th anniversary, join us in celebrating 40 major ways we’ve helped animals exploited by circuses and roadside zoos over the past four decades.
Tigers are known for their unique coat patterns, which (in nature) help them camouflage themselves. But at Waccatee Zoo, Lila no longer looks like a tiger—she’s almost bald.
Never support any venue that allows tourists to interact with tigers, leopards, or other big cats. Here’s how ones that do put everyone involved at risk.
The tragedy isn’t only that April the giraffe died—it’s that she never knew a life without gawping spectators or livestream cameras.
“Doc” Antle was just convicted of four felonies for wildlife trafficking: Now PETA will push for his park to be shut down.
Visitors, beware! Read these shocking reviews from disgruntled people who wish they’d never bought a ticket to a dingy roadside zoo.
A woman at a Thai tourist trap was allowed to take a selfie while holding a reportedly drugged tiger’s testicles—but what’s happening in our own backyard is just as disturbing.
Not only did a judge grant a motion ordering Tim Stark to surrender animals from Wildlife in Need, he also warned him against threatening or intimidating those involved.
Animals were limping, losing hair, and covered with flies—that was the norm at The Camel Farm, but now, this hellhole is no longer allowed to exhibit animals.