Hereβs happy news for anyone hankering to have a hedgehog in the house: State wildlife officials have removed the spiny little critters from the list of restricted wildlife to allow them as pets.
βThe department has decided that hedgehogs are suitable as pets,β said Pat Crouch, field supervisor for the Arizona Game and Fish Department. βOriginally, some of the hedgehogs brought in from different parts of the world could have survived here in the wild and been a problem for native species. But the type that is now sold as pets wouldnβt survive in the wild and become a problem.β
A Tucson pet shop owner said he expects to have hedgehogs available for customers soon.
βIβm getting 15 of them in this month,β said Kenneth MacNeil, owner of An Exotic Pet Shop at 3115 N. First Ave. βSome customers have been asking for them, and weβll have a few for sale.
βTheyβre cute little animals,β MacNeil said. βItβs something like having a porcupine thatβs not so intimidating. Hedgehogs are slightly pokey, but they tend to put their quills down so you can hold them and pet them.β
More rule changes
Updated rules for restricted wildlife, which went into effect Saturday, Dec. 5, also expanded the list of restricted primates βto include all non-human primates in an effort to protect public health and safety,β according to the Game and Fish Department.
Previously, the only restricted primate species were the great apes β including chimpanzees, orangutans and gorillas.
βUntil recently, people could hold any other type of primate without a special license β anything from a marmoset to a baboon,β Crouch said.
He explained why the rules were changed: βSome of the diseases carried by primates can be passed on to humans, and theyβre difficult to keep in a home environment. We felt it prudent for public safety to update the rules. But current owners will be able to keep their animals that are legally held right nowβ through a so-called grandfather clause.
Other new provisions in the rules governing live wildlife include:
- Designating red shiner, certain species of tilapia, paddlefish, sturgeon, Chinese mystery snail and false dark mussel as restricted wildlife because all are non-native to Arizona and pose a threat to native species.
- Prohibiting a person from allowing native desert tortoises to reproduce in captivity in an effort to reduce the number of unwanted captive desert tortoises.
βThey reproduce very well in captivity, and our rehab facilities are full of unwanted desert tortoises,β Crouch said.
βThey cannot be released because that could cause health issues with wild populations.
βIf people have a male and female (tortoise), weβre asking that they are kept separatedβ to prevent reproduction, he said.