An ornamental animal is an animal kept for display or curiosity, often in a park. A wide range of mammals, birds and fish have been kept as ornamental animals. Ornamental animals have often formed the basis of introduced populations, sometimes with negative ecological effects, but a history of being kept as ornamental animals has also preserved breeds, types and even species which have become rare or extinct elsewhere.
This article does not cover animals kept in zoos, wildfowl collections or aquaria.
Ornamental animals have been kept for many centuries in several cultures.
Some ornamental animals have escaped from captivity and have formed feral populations.
A number of animals have been protected from local or worldwide extinction by being kept as ornamental animals.
The following are breeds or species whose history has included a significant period as ornamental animals, either globally or in particular regions (animals kept primarily in modern zoos, aquaria or waterfowl collections are not included):
White cattle with red or black ears were kept in parks in Britain and Ireland over many hundreds of years. Polled (hornless) herds and individuals of these formed the basis of the usually black-eared British White.
Polled, woolly cattle, originally from Scotland but also often kept as park animals in Britain during the 18th and 19th centuries, especially as colour forms such as the Belted Galloway.
A white, usually black-eared beef breed derived from horned herds and individuals of the British park cattle.
A red-eared type of White Park which lives only as a feral animal at Chillingham Castle in northern England (and at one other site).
A black-eared type of White Park recognised as a separate rare breed, from the Vaynol estate in North Wales.
A colour variety of Welsh Mountain sheep, with a history as an ornamental animal.
A short-tailed breed of sheep, developed in Scotland as an ornamental animal from crosses of other breeds and wild sheep.
A black, short-tailed breed of sheep, often multi-horned. It is derived from multi-coloured sheep kept in the Hebrides since the Iron Age, which became extinct there in the late 19th century. A population survived in parks in England and Scotland, where they became always black, probably from cross-breeding with another ornamental breed, Jacob sheep.
A pied, often multi-horned breed of sheep which was kept in parks in England for several centuries. Unrelated to other British sheep, but of uncertain origin.
A small, pied goat with large horns, kept at Blithfield Hall, Staffordshire, England, reputedly since the Middle Ages, and probably derived originally from similar goats from the Rhone region of Switzerland and France.
Birds' ornamental value derives in part from their feather coloration.[2] Feather colors are often produced by carotenoids.