Editorial: How did a tragedy like Sloth World happen? Find answers
They were meant to live their lives in the rainforests of Guyana and Peru, where the temperatures are warm and humid year-round and there is plenty of food and verdant foliage in which to hide. Instead, dozens of sloths died after being stored in a warehouse in the frenetic heart of Orlando's tourist district, within a few hundred feet of International Drive's night-and-day traffic jams.
As of Friday evening, it's difficult to say with certainty how many animals died, under what conditions - though 13 living sloths, including one pregnant female, have been transferred to the Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens in Sanford. The Pulitzer-Prize-winning website Inside Climate News, which originally reported the sloths' plight, obtained public records that describe the desolate lives they lived after arriving in the U.S. - starting with the unheated building, a former vehicle-storage facility, where they were being warehoused.
The eventual plan: Exhibit them in 0 a $49-a-visit attraction known as Sloth World. "Journey through a tropical habitat where a snuggle of sloths live their slowest, happiest lives," the website (which has since been taken down) reads.
The reality could not have been more miserable.
Most of the information in news stories comes from a report detailing an inspection by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, which revealed that 21 sloths had already died after being shipped to Florida in December 2024, in the middle of what passes for winter here - temperatures still too cold for sloths, especially ones being held in a building that lacked electricity and running water.
The owners told FWC that they kept the building warm using space heaters plugged into an adjacent structure, but according to the report, those failed at least once. By February, all of those sloths had died; two more (of a shipment of 10) were already dead when they arrived in mid-February 2025.
The others died sometime between arrival and Aug 7, 2026 - which is when the FWC arrived at the warehouse facility for what it described as an “unannounced, routine inspection." During that visit, wildlife officers found six live sloths on the property that had been shipped to Orlando through the Miami International Airport.
On Friday, owners of Sloth World announced that they were abandoning plans to open Sloth World, and turned over 13 living animals - one of them pregnant - to the Central Florida Zoo, which has experience with caring for sloths and is working with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums for more expertise.
Sloth World will not open following dozens of animal deaths: report
As of Saturday, all 13 were hanging in there, a zoo spokesman said. But some are in fragile condition, and it's not likely they will ever return to the wild. (For updates or to contribute toward the sloths’ care, visit www.centralfloridazoo.org and follow the front-page story).
There are so many questions here, the biggest of which is this: How did something like this happen, in a state with a reputation for tough restrictions on animal imports - particularly of exotic species?
Floridians deserve to know the FWC’s history of contact with the Sloth World owners. Specifically: Why were further imports allowed to a facility after wildlife officers discovered that 31 animals had already died?
The real tragedy: If these questions had been asked earlier, more of these fragile, gentle animals might have been saved.
The Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Opinion Editor Krys Fluker, Executive Editor Roger Simmons and Viewpoints Editor Jay Reddick. Use insight@orlandosentinel.com to contact us.
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This story was originally published April 26, 2026 at 5:57 AM.