Interspecies Adoption



Even in settings where Talking Animal, Civilized Animal, or Funny Animal animals exist, adoptions will still happen between parents and children. Some parents are caring enough to take in a child, regardless of their species. They may be animals raising a human child, humans raising an animal child, animals raising animals of a different species, or any combonation of the three. It doesn't matter, as adoption is still adoption, and parents will always be parents. The subject of the adoption may or may not even be an issue among society.

This is a supertrope of Raised By Wolves and Raised By Humans, as well as cases that aren't covered by either trope. It may also overlap with Moses in The Bullrushes and (especially in comic settings) Oblivious Adoption.

Anime And Manga

 * In Transformers Victory, Star Saber, the new leader of the Autobots, adopts a human boy named Jan, who lost his parents to a Decepticon attack.
 * In You Are Umasou, a Maiasaura raises a Tyrannosaurus from birth, who in turn, after running away from home, adopts a baby Ankylosaurus after being mistaken for its father.

Comics

 * Hellboy is a demon who was adopted by a human parent named Dr. Bruttenholm and raised under the watch of the Bureau of Paranormal Research and Defense. He was raised to appreciate humanity, even if he constantly has to deal with the fact that he's frighteningly different from them anyway.
 * Superman is probably the most famous example of this trope. He's an alien sent to Earth as a baby, and he grew up on a farm by the Kent family.
 * Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: four adorable baby turtles fall into a sewer and are adopted by an ordinary rat (other than the whole "knows ninjutsu" thing). Only later do the five mutate and become intelligent.

Film

 * The Stuart Little movie did this to remove the Fridge Logic from the original book (where the titular character just had human parents for no apparent reason).
 * Giant panda Po's father in Kung Fu Panda is a duck; this goes unmentioned in the first movie, but becomes a minor plot element in the sequel.
 * In Thor, turns out to be an Ice Giant adopted by Odin and raised as his own under a glamor.
 * Elf: Buddy is a human adopted by Santa Claus, and raised among elves.
 * Disney's The Ugly Dachshund. A Great Dane thinks he's a dachshund because he was raised by a dachshund mother.
 * Aladar from Dinosaur is an Iguanodon raised by lemurs.
 * Babe the pig is adopted by Fly who is a dog.
 * Most of 'Leafie a Hen Into The Wild' revolves around a hen and her Happily Adopted son (a duck).

Literature

 * In the Discworld novel Guards Guards, Carrot is a human adopted by dwarves. He is completely oblivious to this, even when his adoptive father tries to explain that there's a reason he was always too tall to fit in dwarf passages correctly. Notable in that even after it's been explained to him and he's accepted that he is biologically a human, Carrot still considers himself a dwarf, albeit a very tall one.
 * "The Ugly Duckling" is a classic example of this trope. A swan raised by a duck.
 * Runescape: Betrayal at Falador, Kara was adopted and raised by dwarfs.
 * The children's book Tyranosaurus Drip by Julia Donaldson is about a duckbill dinosaur "adopted" by tyranosaurs. (Mother Tyranosaur can't count, and doesn't realise there's one more egg than there should be.)
 * The Sheep-Pig by Dick King Smith, the book Babe was based on, likewise has Babe raised by Fly the sheepdog.

Live Action TV

 * Worf was adopted by the Rozhenko family, a human couple from Russia. In turn, Worf's son Alexander Rozhenko was also raised by Worf's adoptive parents.

Video Games

 * Mallow from Super Mario RPG, originally from Nimbus Land, was adopted by Frogfucius in Frog Pond, and grew up largely believing he was a frog "who can't jump".
 * in Disgaea 2 Cursed Memories is a demon adopted by humans as a result of his biological parents leaving to fight fake Zenon. They fail.
 * Penn in Soul Nomad and The World Eaters is adopted by the Nereids. This is part of a breeding plan when he turns 18.
 * F-Zero's Leon, depending on the game (although both examples still fit). In X, he's adopted by Mrs. Arrow and her husband Super Arrow, a crime-fighting Superhero couple. According to GX, however, he was instead adopted by Fable, a soldier belonging to the race that attacked Leon's homeworld twelve years ago (which led to the poor kid losing his parents and his left eye, as well as Zou becoming an economical dump) who rebelled when he became disgusted by their tactics. Leon's a bipedal cat-like alien, the Arrows are human, and Fable is another species of extraterrestrial being.
 * After the Time Skip in Final Fantasy VI,
 * At the end of Final Fantasy IV the After Years, This is a bit of an ambiguous example as
 * After her parents were killed by Space Pirates, Samus Aran was adopted by the Chozo, an ancient race of bird-like creatures that raised her and trained her to be what she is.
 * In Devil May Cry 2, a big deal is made out of
 * Neverwinter Nights 2. The protagonist's race can change, but the foster father is always the same.

Web Comics

 * Lindesfarne in Kevin and Kell.
 * The trolls in Homestuck. It's societal norm for them to be raised by another species. However, these guardians may or may not be totally sentient, and not all of them are good parents, so it also delves a bit into Raised By Wolves.
 * Selkie is about an amphibious young girl, and the man who adopts her.
 * Buwaro, Sakido and Iratu, all demons, are adopted by the angel Darius in Slightly Damned.

Web Original

 * Quite a few characters from Cerberus Daily News. Thus includes (but is not limited to) a Turian who was adopted by a human couple (Gahars Patnus), a human who was adopted by an Asari couple (Some_Random_Merc/Johnny), a Drell who has recently adopted a human infant (Rohim), a human whose legal guardian and father-figure is a Turian (Wildflower/Flower and Davril, respectively), and a human who was raised by a Quarian (Human Quarian/Kolya).

Western Animation

 * Heffer was raised by wolves. The Wolfe family to be specific. They were just going to eat him, and started fattening him up, but grew to love him and raised him as their own. The "birthmark" on his rump is where the wolves were going to divide him up.
 * SpongeBob and Patrick adopted a baby scallop in one episode. It left other citizens quite confused when they thought about the biology involved.
 * Dinosaur Train: Buddy the T-Rex is adopted by a pteranodon family.
 * Cat Dog continually brought up one particular issue over the course of the series: Where did CatDog actually come from? For as long as they can remember, they'd always lived on their own. The series ended with CatDog going on a long journey to find their parents. It was never revealed how CatDog came to be, but for a brief time after they were born, they had been raised by a frog for a father and a sasquatch for a mother. They were all separated in a storm.
 * Darwin from The Amazing World of Gumball used to just be the Waterson family's pet fish, but he developed intelligence, grew legs, became Gumball's best friend, and the family adopted him as one of their own.
 * In My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic, Twilight Sparkle (a unicorn) had to induce a dragon egg to hatch as part of her entrance exam in magic school. She ends up being a Cool Big Sis/Parental Substitute to him, who serves as her underling and assistant.
 * Buzz Lightyear of Star Command probably topped this concept beyond most other examples by having a human girl being adopted by two robots.

Real Life

 * Real Life examples involving animals like dogs, cats, and rabbits are a mainstay of websites like Cute Overload.
 * One of the strangest incidents of this kind occurred in Samburu, Kenya: a lioness adopted an oryx.

Other

 * [[media:[[IMG 2]]_6550.jpg|This]] Bad Habits strip, which is also an Oblivious Adoption.
 * There is a famous joke about a turtle which constantly climbs up a tree and jumps down with its legs spread. After a few attempts (and the turtle getting quite a few traumas), a bird watching it from nearby asks its mate, "Should we tell our son he's adopted?"