That depends, among others, on the countries and species involved. Some are trickier than others. In particular when diseases detrimental to domestic livestock are involved.By the way, red tape and restrictions are also overrated.
That depends, among others, on the countries and species involved. Some are trickier than others. In particular when diseases detrimental to domestic livestock are involved.By the way, red tape and restrictions are also overrated.
Oh, really?because other mongoose don't stand bipedally.
It really just depends on which one is more convenient to the customer – a lot of local and common restaurants that sell similar foods are right next to each other with success. I don’t know any fast food Indian restaurants but a Dominos and local pizza restaurant are right next to each other in a town in Illinois I frequently visit, with the Dominos being the better option for fast service and delivery options and the local one being better for food quality. That’s just food though, so ending that there before the thread gets too far off topic.I think this question is wrongly asked: zoos need to be diverse. If they get uniform, this opens a niche to a different zoo. It is like with restaurants: a successful Indian restaurant in the neighbourhood does not mean that a second restaurant should be Indian, but the opposite: second restaurant should be different.
The main difference here is that if you want to watch a blockbuster movie, you can just rent it on a streaming service for a buck or two on your TV or computer. As biased as they may be towards a certain actor, it’s not that big of a deal if the movie doesn’t have the actors they want. Going to a zoo, especially outside of the city, requires gas, road-trip planning, most-likely admission prices and more. Average guests aren’t going to travel half way across the country to see a Guam kingfisher – that’s just the reality. They want to see an impressive habitat for the elephants or giraffes.The idea that for a zoo, most important is having popular species is much overextended to the point of being wrong. It is like thinking that for a blockbuster movie, it is most important that the actor is handsome.
Zoos don’t usually phase out a species because they want to. There’s almost always a reason, such as the last individual being too old or the exhibit is simply too outdated and there’s not enough funding to make a whole new one, this is especially true for large animals. Sometimes planned phase outs are better for the zoo, if the result lives up to better exhibit quality for a certain animal, even if it means sacrificing an older species.I would strongly oppose planned phasing out any species. It has two reasons. First, current import regulations mean that one cannot easily reverse the decision. Second, situation in the wild changes very fast and a phased out LC species easily can be Endangered in few years time. This happened with golden-bellied mangabeys and a lot of 'commoner' macaque species in Europe. So I think it was a wrong recommendation of EEP to phase out e.g. several monkey species or East Caucasian Ibex. Zoos certainly need to plan their projects with some uncertainity in the future. Also, maybe even the restrictive regulations will change.
Zoos don’t usually phase out a species because they want to.
Recent import of gaurs and douc langurs to Czechia is the example.
I would strongly oppose planned phasing out any species.
The currently proposed list of new marsupial's EEPs is perfect example of it. They picked 22 marsupial species and that's it?! And in these 22 species there are bilbies and long-beaked echidna with a whopping 0 animals currently kept, bear cuscus with 7 animals and joint EEP for 4 oppossum species with 3 of those being represented by >5 specimes. All this with a shiny "Planning for brighter future" headline and note that this was put together after "close work with ZAA."
No dusky pademelons, no eastern wallaroos,...of course there is information that other species will be moved to either monitoring, phase out, replace with or do not obtain...I can't help but think that there will be very little "monitoring" and a lot of "phase-out". And with how careful and sensitive Australia is about giving out these species, once we lose them we won't ever see them again I am sure about that.![]()
Keep in mind that this is the only phalangeriforme on the entire list. Meanwhile Macropods get to have seven representatives. That does not sound balanced, if anyone asks me.bear cuscus with 7 animals
Keep in mind that this is the only phalangeriforme on the entire list. Meanwhile Macropods get to have seven representatives. That does not sound balanced, if anyone asks me.
You can't have balance where it never was though...macropods would always take the bigger piece of cake purely because of numbers...
The currently proposed list of new marsupial's EEPs is perfect example of it. They picked 22 marsupial species and that's it?! And in these 22 species there are bilbies and long-beaked echidna with a whopping 0 animals currently kept, bear cuscus with 7 animals and joint EEP for 4 oppossum species with 3 of those being represented by >5 specimes. All this with a shiny "Planning for brighter future" headline and note that this was put together after "close work with ZAA."
Zoos don’t usually phase out a species because they want to. There’s almost always a reason, such as the last individual being too old or the exhibit is simply too outdated and there’s not enough funding to make a whole new one, this is especially true for large animals. Sometimes planned phase outs are better for the zoo, if the result lives up to better exhibit quality for a certain animal, even if it means sacrificing an older species.
Agree with everything, but I'd like to precise some of your points:I feel like there are a lot of ways zoos could help reverse these trends of phasing out species, and wish more Zoos would innovate and create new ideas that'd help better their mission, both education and conservation wise.
1. Mixed Species Exhibits! While certain mixed species exhibits are common, this is a trend that I wish zoos would take further. Sure, many zoos want the ABC Elephants, Giraffes, and Zebras- but keeping these species in mixed settings would limit the amount of space they take from other species. As Dallas' Giants of the Savannas show, it is very possible for a zoo to build an innovative elephant complex that mixes them with other ungulates or birds. Throw some impala or springbok in there! Giraffes and Plains Zebras are both even easier to mix, and I find it inexcusable for a reputable zoo to still be keeping them in single species exhibits.
Mixes can also go beyond the standard mixes with new world Primates, free-flight aviaries, and African savannas. Many zoos keep some arboreal primate species, so why not add some ground level interest to these exhibits? Try mixing a langur species with chevrotains, warty pigs, or tapirs. Try mixing South American Primates with pudu or agouti. Try mixing Guenons or Colobus with a duiker species. If zoos get creative with how they use space and build more dynamic mixed exhibits, it'd go a long way to enhance both education and conservation.
2. Reconsider the keeping of domestic animals in zoos. I am all for city zoos using a small portion of their zoo for a farm exhibit, especially if it focuses on endangered heritage breeds or local breeds. However, does every zoo need this kind of exhibit? And what about other domestic species? I can't stand the number of zoos passing off watusi Cattle in an African Savanna, for instance, when there are plenty of endangered ungulates by which the SSPs are struggling. Perhaps zoos should reconsider keeping camels in their collection plan as well, to give additional room to Asian Deer, Banteng, Gaur, and Takin.
3. Take advantage of geography. Some zoos do a really good job with this, but others not so much. Many zoos have either wetlands/pond areas or mountainous/rocky areas. These don't need to sit as wasted space. These areas can make very interesting exhibits for animals from these sort of biomes. If a zoo has a pond sitting unutilized, throw in some endangered waterfowl species, or build habitats for some semi-aquatic animals. If a zoo has rocky terrain they haven't built on, add habitats for markhor, bighorn sheep, or snow leopards.
4. Focus on smaller animals. I'm all for zoos having those large animals that attract visitors, but visitors who are already in a zoo would likely stay longer if the collection had a greater total number of species on display. Keep those select megafauna, and certainly have those ungulate habitats, but make sure these are supplemented by habitats for smaller mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians (the latter of which is extremely underrepresented in most zoos).
5. Reconsider which species a zoo is keeping when there are two similar species. Yeah, I get it. As much as I'd love some zoos to, they aren't going to replace their Tigers with a rare Asian Ungulate species. But that doesn't mean that a zoo couldn't (and shouldn't) replace generic Tigers with subspecific ones. This also applies to species the general public won't know how to differentiate. For instance, perhaps some zoos with chimpanzees would be better off switching over to bonobos, and support an SSP in need of some additional holders. Or consider switching which Gibbon species it keeps towards a rarer one. A lot of times the species struggling to stay in US Zoos have a similar species in a lot of Zoos, quite possibly overrepresented, and a redistribution of which zoos are keeping which animals could be a net positive.
5. I thought this was standard in EAZA and ZAA/AZA, but apparently the keeping of generic/hybrids is still widely popular, but I highly hope it changes in the future.
Another forum mentions species being kept in more than 1 enclosure in the same zoo. Surely, these animals should be moved off-exhibit or behind the scenes, rather than the only specimens of a species, especially if this is rarely kept in zoos. I remember reading about the time Edinburgh Zoo had 8 meerkat exhibits. Surely this would be boring for even the most avid meerkat enthusiast.I also get the sense that the focus on conservation breeding has meant that a lot of animals have been moved off-exhibit or behind the scenes.
Fair enough. But one species to represent phalangeriformes is still ridiculous. Can the Sulawesi bear cuscus really be a good subsitute for the other phalangeriformes that are being sent to the shadow realm known as MON?
What do zoo community does to get an exception out of veterinary and export laws and directives?
You're complaining about only having 22 marsupial species?! Keep in mind that's already over double the number of species to what is managed by the AZA in US Zoos, and seems like quite a substantial number of species to manage. I sure wouldn't be complaining if there are that many species still present and being managed.
oftentimes they have legitimate reasons to