Personally, I get a kick out of seeing any zoo animal. There are certain species I don't spend much time observing these days (domestics, koalas and Eastern grey kangaroos mainly) but that doesn't mean I don't appreciate them.
They're just so common where I live. Before my neighborhood took down another chunk of woodlands, white-tailed deer would come in my backyard and around other parts of the neighborhood often. You can also see them if you're paying attention when driving down the road and looking where a good bit of trees still stand.I agree with most of these, but white-tailed deer are not common in European zoos.
I get they're endangered, unfortunately, and they are gorgeous and adorable animals, but between the zoo I volunteer at and almost every zoo I've been to having these exact types, I've grown used to seeing them. Now seeing ones I haven't seen much such as pied and emperor tamarins has yet to cease to amaze me.Hopefully you realise how fortunate it is that you can call these species "common." They're both severely endangered in the wild, and a healthy captive population is crucial to both species' survival beyond the coming decades.
I feel the same way about some species. It seems that some zoos have a very subjective view about conservation. They consider some species worth saving and the same species appears in hundreds of collections, regardless if any are part of a reintroduction programme. Others are considered 'boring' and are not kept by many zoos. I had a talk with the olingo keeper at Kilverstone Zoo. The zoo had 4 olingos and kept the father with the daughter and the mother with the son in order to have a limited genetic diversity. At the time, there were very few olingos outside Central and South America. Now there are now, despite the fact that the olinguito appeared in the media in 2013 and the name was one of the words of the year.I get they're endangered, unfortunately, and they are gorgeous and adorable animals, but between the zoo I volunteer at and almost every zoo I've been to having these exact types, I've grown used to seeing them. Now seeing ones I haven't seen much such as pied and emperor tamarins has yet to cease to amaze me.
Isn’t the “meerkat epidemic” at zoos mostly a UK thing? I’ve often heard people from there complaining on this site about how every zoo has far too many, and while they’re certainly a common zoo animal over here in the states, only about 60% of the zoos I’ve visited in my 17 years have had them.
Meanwhile very few zoos have numbats and some endangered Australian species are only kept by one zoo.Almost every zoo in Australia (that displays exotic animals) has meerkats...
I feel similarly. Although I don’t like how they overshadow other mongoose species in captive representation and possibly take up space that could be used to house more imperiled small mammals, I don’t get tired of seeing meerkats in zoos as Suricata suricatta just happens to be one of my favorite animals.Almost every zoo in Australia (that displays exotic animals) has meerkats...
That said, it doesn't bother me as I like them anyway...
How many zoos have shrews in them? I would like to go to the Mole and Shrew House in Tokyo?I really highly value most animals, and try to appreciate every creature’s individual uniqueness and beauty however here a few that simply don’t interest me:
1: Fish (besides sharks, stingrays, and eels)
2. Shrews
3. Koalas and Wombats
4. Giant Pandas (I’m sorry, but I would much rather spend my time observing brown, black, Andean, sun, sloth, and polar bears and even red pandas)
5. Most rodents (with the exception of capybaras, beavers, squirrels, chipmunks, and a few others)
How many zoos have shrews in them? I would like to go to the Mole and Shrew House in Tokyo?
I honestly don’t know, but I was referring to elephant shrews. Some zoos keep them.
Elephant-shrews (more accurately known as sengi) are not shrews, they're their own order.
~Thylo
Really? Even barnacles, sponges, nematodes or fairy flies?Animals That Don't Interest Me:
- None
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