Spanish police discover a hall with more than a thousand stuffed animals including cheetahs, leopards, lions, lynxes, snow leopards, and crocodiles, as well as extinct animals in the wild such as the Bengal tiger, which is worth about 30 million euros on the black market.

Iran PressEurope: The stuffed animals were presented in a museum, in a hall the size of seven football fields. It is unclear why this gigantic collection, which also includes 198 elephant tusks, has only now been discovered.

The owner has been investigated for smuggling and violation of laws protecting endangered species. The owner, a well-known entrepreneur from Valencia, said he inherited most of the animals from his father, Spanish media reported.

An extinct north African oryx is among a collection of more than 1,000 stuffed animals being investigated by police in Spain.

Of the 1,090 specimens found, 405 are from protected species, the Civil Guard said, while two are almost extinct - the addax, or white antelope, and the Bengal tiger.

There are also examples of cheetah, leopard, lion, lynx, polar bear, snow panther, white rhinoceros, and 198 large ivory tusks from elephants.

The scimitar oryx - also known as the Sahara oryx - was declared extinct in the wild by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature in 2000.

The collection is worth about £24m on the black market and its owner, a businessman, could be charged with trafficking and crimes against the environment, officers said.

The animals were found in two warehouses covering more than 50,000 square meters on the outskirts of Bétera, a small town north of the eastern coastal city of Valencia.

The discovery was made following an investigation by Valencia Police's Nature Protection Team which began in November.

It is the largest number of protected stuffed specimens in the country, officers said.

Investigators will be looking for documents justifying ownership.

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