These animals are worth absolute fortunes
Animals with amazing price tags
Kim the sheepdog, $37,350
In February this year, the record for Britain’s priciest sheepdog was broken by one-year-old Welsh border collie Kim. The average price for a working dog is around £2,000 ($2.8k), but Kim sold for more than 13 times that amount when a farmer from Staffordshire bought her for £27,000 ($37,350). Kim’s trainer Dewi Jenkins attributed her over-the-odds value to her intelligence, ability to learn quickly and red color, which is currently in vogue in sheepdog circles.
Cato the Bengal cat, $41,435
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Barbra Streisand’s cloned dogs, $50,000 each
CC the first cloned cat, $50,000
CC or 'Copy Cat' was the first successfully cloned cat back in 2002. A domestic short hair, she was born to a tabby surrogate but was genetically identical to female donor Rainbow. She was cloned at a Texas university, with the $50,000 project funded by a business looking to clone pets. CC went on to have three kittens naturally in 2006 and lived with one of the university professors and his wife in Texas. CC reportedly died in March 2020, having reached an impressive age of 17.
Mike Tyson’s Bengal tigers, $70,000 each
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A giant stag beetle, $89,000
Sir Lancelot Encore the first cloned dog, $155,000
Wilodge Poshspice the cow, $363,000
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Bolt the racing pigeon, $400,000
Racing pigeons are wildly popular in China, and the magnificent-looking Bolt (pictured), named after Jamaican Olympic sprinter Usain Bolt, sold for a huge €310,000 ($400k) to Chinese businessman Gao Fuxin in 2013. His Belgian breeder Leo Heremans had developed a virus from spending so much time with his birds and was forced to sell his whole flock of 530 pigeons for €4.3 million ($5.6m). Pigeons live around four years, and Bolt was bought for breeding purposes.
Double Diamond the sheep, $510,000
Missy the Holstein cow, $1.2 million
When Eastside Lewisdale Gold Missy, or Missy for short, sold for $1.2 million at auction in Ontario in 2009, she immediately became the world's most expensive cow. Producing 50% more milk than an average cow – a whopping 50kg of milk a day – Missy, from Poken, Alberta, was deemed invaluable for elite bovine genetics. When she sold at auction her farm's marketing manager, Chris Parry, described Missy as "extremely tall, long and stylish. She walks on great feet and legs and has a great mammary system. She's ideal for milk production". It seems like the buyer agreed when they forked out over a million for the prized cow.
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Armando the racing pigeon, $1.4 million
New Kim the racing pigeon, $1.9 million
New Kim stole Armando’s title when she became the world’s priciest pigeon in November last year, selling to an anonymous Chinese bidder for an eye-watering €1.6 million ($1.9m). Part of the shock in New Kim’s price is that the starting bid was just €200 ($242), as female birds are typically less valuable than males because they produce less offspring. New Kim only raced in 2018, and went on to retire early after being crowned “best young bird”.
The dog with "lion’s blood", $2 million
A Tibetan Mastiff was only a year old when he became the world’s most expensive dog, selling for nearly $2 million in 2014. Fascinated by the "lion’s blood" of the animal, a Chinese property developer coughed up 12 million yuan for the 200lb (90kg) puppy. The sum topped the former highest price ever paid for a dog of the same breed, which was an 11-month puppy named Big Splash, who sold for $1.5 million in 2011. Tibetan mastiffs have become a symbol of wealth in China.
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A beautiful camel, $2.7 million
El Rey Magnum the Arabian horse, several million
Horizon the African buffalo, $11 million
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Green Monkey the horse, $16 million
Racehorse Fusaichi Pegasus, $60 million
The world’s most valuable animal is Fusaichi Pegasus, a racehorse that won the Kentucky Derby in 2000. The stallion was sold to John Magnier’s Coolmore Stud that same year for $60 million. Adjusted for inflation, that's as much as $91.1 million in today's money. At one time, his stud fee was $150,000.
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