in the sneyd green animal shelter they only keep one animal which is a fully grown giraffe called nathhhan baggely aka the zoo keepers cal him baggo he was born and raised in South Africa and was deported to stoke on trent as only a young child where he was adopted into the shelter now he has set the record for the worlds largest neck measuring up at 25 metres long baggo the giraffe sits down all day plays fifa and lets his sexual desires out by fiddling wiv himself
It depends on what animals are being sheltered. I am a manager at the Global Conservation Group Wildlife Rehabilitation Center in WI, and it only costs us about a couple hundred a year, but we're only about a year old, so we don't have that many animals to take care of yet.
For one animal to be kept alive in a shelter, it can cost upwards of 200 to 300 dollars a month. This includes food, lodging and vet bills.
No, the answer is no because either way they will die which will cause alot of evaporation in animals life keep them in a shelter without KILLING THEM
Many!
Four.
Many!
thousands!
NOT ENOUGHT FOR THEM we should mmake more animal shelters. animals help us so we should help them
over 8,ooo animals or more enter Ohio shelters every year
92,000
4 million animals die a year because there isn't enough room in animal shelters!!
There are sadly tons and tons of shelters that humanely euthanize (Usually it is an injection into a vein) animals after a certain length of stay. There are so many animals that are going into shelters than there are being adopted. However there are also no kill shelters that will keep an animal as long as it takes to find it a home. If you have to bring an animal to a shelter please find out if it is a no kill shelter if it is find somewhere else that isn't.
The RSPCA's money is made by donations. The public donate money to keep the shelters going and keep the animals healthy.
It is estimated that millions of animals are euthanized in shelters each year, with the exact number varying depending on factors such as location and shelter policies. Efforts are being made to reduce euthanasia rates through increased adoption, spaying/neutering, and education.