LIFE

Costa Rica Sloth Santi Shows the Hidden Cost of Wildlife

At Rescate Wildlife Rescue Center, a burned sloth named Santi is treated alongside thousands of wild animals injured by power lines, vehicles, or captivity. Costa Rica’s zoo closures and the pet trade intersect here, raising questions about development and conservation.

A Night in the Clinic and a Country in the Wires

Santi is small enough to feel light in a caretaker’s hands, but his injuries make the room go quiet. He arrived at the Rescate Wildlife Rescue Center with electrical burns on his limbs and head, and the damage reaches the details you cannot ignore: nails, extremities, face, and fur. In the clinic, the air carries that clean hospital smell, suggesting disinfectant and routine. His caregivers named him Santi as a term of affection, the notes say.

Santi is a juvenile sloth, a species that Costa Rica named as one of its national symbols in two thousand twenty-one. His burns came from the electrical grid, according to the notes, the kind of accident that shows up when a forest is cut into fragments, and an animal’s route becomes a wager across wires.

Santi is not unusual. About three thousand wild animals enter Rescate’s hospital annually, arriving from electrocutions, roadkill, other human causes, or captivity. Rescate is one of Costa Rica’s primary wildlife treatment centers and the only hospital dedicated exclusively to wild animals. Patients range from small birds and turtles to large felines like pumas and jaguars, all with the goal of healing, rehabilitation, and, if possible, returning to the forest.

Rescate Wildlife Rescue Center in Alajuela, Costa Rica. EFE/ Jeffrey Arguedas

Pets, Fragmented Forests, and the Work Humans Create

In a country known for biodiversity, it’s easy to assume the crisis is about capacity—more beds, cages, and staff. Veterinarian Isabel Hagnauer at Rescate says the deeper issue is why animals arrive. “One of the biggest problems in Costa Rica, a very biodiverse country, is not the need for more hospitals or rescue sites, but that most admissions result from anthropogenic causes, primarily keeping wild animals as pets,” she told EFE.

This shifts the debate from rescue centers to households, streets, and the economy. The hospital is not just treating injuries; it is addressing a cultural habit.

Hagnauer says the country needs a change in thinking so people understand wildlife belongs in its natural environment, and she ties that urgency to development itself. “We also have so many roadkills and electrocutions that are related to forest fragmentation due to human activities,” she told EFE. The everyday observation is simple: as daylight fades, drivers scan the asphalt, knowing an animal can appear from the edge of the forest.

“We need more education and sustained efforts to help the public understand the importance of wild animals living in the forest, not outside it,” Hagnauer told EFE. The challenge is that education is slow, while pressures driving quick decisions are fast.

Rescate’s goal remains release, but not every animal can return. Those with severe injuries may not survive in the wild, and former pets may not adapt. Some cases require permanent care despite initial hopes.

Rescate Wildlife Rescue Center in Alajuela, Costa Rica. EFE/ Jeffrey Arguedas

After Zoos Close, Rescue Centers Carry the Weight

For animals that cannot return to the wild, Rescate operates a sanctuary where the public can observe them through an environmental education program promoting wildlife conservation. The sanctuary houses about 1,000 animals, including pumas, jaguars, ocelots, scarlet macaws, various monkeys, tayras, foxes, turtles, parrots, and other exotic species rescued from illegal trafficking.

Seen up close, these animals become a lesson in distance. Taking a wild creature. Up close, these animals illustrate the challenge of distance. Removing a wild creature from the forest can be quick; returning it may be impossible. They can be released and reproduce, and their chicks can be released at specific points in the country where efforts are underway to recover the birds’ populations.

On May 11, 2024, Costa Rica closed its last zoos to promote the conservation of wild species in their natural habitats, away from confinement and exhibition. Animals from zoos were transferred to rescue centers that met environmental and protection standards, according to the notes.

This decision places rescue centers at the core of Costa Rica’s vision for wildlife. They must repair damaged roads and wires, care for animals that cannot return, and educate visitors that the forest is not a living room. It is a significant responsibility.

Closing zoos may seem like a clear moral choice, but daily admissions at places like Rescate reveal a more complex reality. A country can reject cages as entertainment, yet still create cages as a consequence. It can celebrate wildlife as national identity while fostering conditions that harm it.

Back in the clinic, Santi’s burns turn policy into something you can touch. They ask what kind of development is being pursued and who pays for it when the wires run through the canopy.

Also Read: What Tourists Should Know About Nightlife in Latin America’s Big Cities

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