I don't know captain Nemo you tell meWhich category would you put giant squid in?
I don't know captain Nemo you tell meWhich category would you put giant squid in?
I can’t answer that question, I haven’t been to a zoo or aquarium for as long as I can remember because I’m still down in this submarine.I don't know captain Nemo you tell me![]()
Yes, that's the general idea.I suppose then you're grouping difficult to keep animals based on how long we can keep them, with ones we can keep long-term with some difficulty, ones we can only keep temporarily, and ones we can't keep at all.
- The no-no ones: doesn't matter what you do, they'll die in a few days or hours. Ex: Narwhals (they will die out of stress).
@remar maybe the "no-no" category would include also months, but the general idea is that the animal will die under human care. I agree with you that most animals could theoretically be taken under human care, and would love that the thread could talk also about that!Maybe you should do some more research before starting a thread. Within two minute research at Zootierliste you could have found out, that a narwahl was kept for 4 months at Vancouver Aquarium back in 1970. Therefore the species would be a contender for your second category.
With the exception of large marine animals like baleen whales, i still believe that every animal can be kept under human care. For many species there is still the problem, that we simply have to less knowledge to keep them alive right now. Other problems may be money or the source of animals, that aren't present at zoos yet. Quite a bunch of species kept nowadays where believed to be impossible to keep a few decades ago.