At no point did I 'legally imply' anything - and snowglobes have been introduced into this by you, not me.
Of course animals are important individually, and of course they are not objects - again I never said anything to the contrary.
In a large zoo, hundreds of staff have cared for and have been personally committed to many thousands of animals, for maybe hundreds of years. Everyone has had a different personal relationship with many of these. A graveyard is ridiculous. A chicken farmer producing thousands of birds for human consumption (or 'waste' chicks for zoo animal feed) would not have a statue of 'clucky'. Some animals in zoos are fed as live-food or dead-food to others, so how can these be 'valuable intrinsically as individuals' and suitable for memorials. Some zoos sell meat from their animals in zoo shops.
Animals are not humans.
Misquoting me though, is insulting.
They are animals, not people.
I am sorry, I did not intend to misquote you.
My point is that there is a difference between being a human and being a person. According to legal definitions, every entity is either one of two things-- a person or an object. Because you said that animals are not people, and because everything is either a person or an object, you are implying that animals are objects (under the legal definition) because they are not people. That is my point-- not to say you said something that you did not, but to say what you may have unintentionally implied. Because you seemingly implied that animals are objects because they are not people, I offered the snowglobe comparison, to show what another collection of objects may look like.