I suppose it has not good outdoor enclosure, because it seems depressed to me; Maybe I expect more ''happy'' or interested expression if this animals had access to at least one naturalistic or proper enclosure. Otherwise I don't know anything other than this supposition.Its eyes are down because it's looking in a trough and from this photo, how do you know if it is alone or what it's outdoor enclosure is like or if it has one? I'm just playing devil's advocate here and I, like you, suspect the animal probably isn't kept in the best conditions but you can't know that from this photo.
@Bib Fortuna. I think if this tapir had/have a chance to interact with conspecifics, and if other enclosures are provided, beside this ''indoor enclosure'', naturalistic (with soil and living plants), and maybe divided in two or more compartmants with appropriate behavioral enrichment, this animal shouldn't be deppressed or will only show deppression at very few circumstances.
@Ned: I saw this tapir deppresed first of all judging from captured facial expression - eye posture down, looks very deep. And of course these conditions won't make any animal happy (some research shows that topical contact of skin with natural substrate like humus soil, makes people and animals happy, and that explains the ''syndrome'' of ''happy gardener'').
Although my first reaction was mountain tapir, the more I look at it and the more pictures I google the more I'm thinking it's a pretty furry specimen of Bairds' tapir.
Anyone on this forum with a more definite answer?
From this photo the fur could be seen more clearly.
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