Hot Take: Ambassador Animals (Animals in children's zoos or behind the scenes displayed for keeper talks or shows) should not be a thing. Animals such as small cats, tamunduas, and others deserve actual spaces. Zoos like Cheyenne Mountain Zoo and Columbus Zoo do give their ambassador animals displays but they are atrocious. CMZ literally keeps a lone prairie dog in a large glass terrarium. CZ has really small, unnaturalistic exhibits in their Adventure Cove section.
I can’t help but agree with this. I have been vocal about my feelings about animal ambassador shows before. While I don’t disagree with the idea of using animals for shows, I found it hypocritical for both accredited zoos and private traveling zoos showing off seemingly tame animals on stage while emphasizing that these animals (which are not running away, hiding or attacking their handlers) are wild and should not be
To use animals animals in shows looks like either:
1) the zoo touting man’s dominion over wildlife (a really big no no in conservation circles) or…
2) a normal conventional exhibit doesn’t work well enough for educate the public or appreciate the respective species for what they are which in the end undermines the any statement of how a good zoo enclosure can educate the public.
Animosity is a big word but by the point I saw the AZA try to have cheetahs and clouded leopards get exempt from the big cat public safety act in order to use them as ambassadors and Nashville Zoo’s fanaloka cub updates (with the animal being displayed in the most “domestic” setup) I just can’t help but cringe at the thought of animal ambassador shows taking place at western zoos.
Society not caring about animals is an issue that is probably deeply rooted which novel animal shows have little to no effect on changing. Sure they might win a few hearts for animals but on a greater scale it’s just not efficient.I strongly disagree that animal ambassadors need to be removed from zoos.
One of the biggest challenges facing conservation today is that people just don't care. An increasing amount of people live in urban centers with few opportunities to be out in nature or interact with animals, and thus no chance to even begin to care about something they view as distant and irrelevant to them.
Animal ambassadors exist as a way to show people animals, up close and personal, often at a very young age. If fact, I would argue they are some of the most important animals in the entire collection.
And not to toot my own horn but it is possible to have an appreciation without getting “up close and personal” with non domestic species. You see, animal ambassador shows definitely weren’t a thing in Turkey but yet I still think and care about animals. I got my appreciation for animals from television shows*, picture books, toys, and my mother endorsing my interests long before I visited my first good zoo. By the time I saw an animal get used as an “ambassador” for the first time I already was enamored with animals, so the animal ambassadors I saw in the camp best serve as novelty, which is unfortunately what animal ambassador shows (or animals for that matter) are in the subconscious of the general public.
*=I will be honest and say that Zoboomafoo, which could be considered as a twenty minute animal ambassador show, did play a huge role in my childhood. However, that show was from an era when many utilizations of animals, that are now deemed unacceptable, were accepted. That, and why set up a stage and animals go through shows their entire lives when you can just show people a recording of a show or documentary?