Sometimes the best design for an exhibit is fenced natural land, and still classifies as world classworld class zoos that has beautifully designed exhibits.
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Sometimes the best design for an exhibit is fenced natural land, and still classifies as world classworld class zoos that has beautifully designed exhibits.
Case in point, from my experience, the biggest offenders of this hot take are almost always the Ankole-Watusi Cattle for savanna displays.
My experience is very much the opposite sort of confusion, which is people seeing actual wild cattle species and going "oh, it's just a cow" and moving on, mistaking them for exotic breeds of domestics.While domesticated species can and do have a place in the average zoo...
You're absolutely right about this specific example. I think that it creates confusion and causes laypeople to assume that Watusi are wild animals.
Question, while I do agree, where is the line drawn here? How about llamas, dromedaries, Bactrian camels, yaks, and alpacas? Are they offenders of the same caliber as watusi?While yes, one can argue about the educational value of the following. I can’t help but confess that I do not like the practice of zoos using domesticated animals as a “filler species” for SBNO enclosures. Case in point, from my experience, the biggest offenders of this hot take are almost always the Ankole-Watusi Cattle for savanna displays.
SBNO - standing, but not occupied
Question, while I do agree, where is the line drawn here? How about llamas, dromedaries, Bactrian camels, yaks, and alpacas? Are they offenders of the same caliber as watusi?
What about Domestic Reindeer?Yes
~Thylo
I think the yak and dromedary are fine, given there are wild populations out there. I also excuse the Bactrian camel because I have an odd soft spot for them.How about llamas, dromedaries, Bactrian camels, yaks, and alpacas?
dromedary are fine,
Ah. Was unaware of that. Always thought there were wild individuals somewhere. Learn something new everyday, I guess.Wild Dromedaries don't exist, as the Dromedary camel is a domesticated species. Dromedaries that live freely without human assistance are feral animals.
How about llamas, dromedaries, Bactrian camels, yaks, and alpacas?
Question, while I do agree, where is the line drawn here? How about llamas, dromedaries, Bactrian camels, yaks, and alpacas? Are they offenders of the same caliber as watusi?
Another hot take, there is a place for these domestics in showcasing different environments. I like the idea of using certain breeds of domestics to represent the farms of a certain area, such as an African Kraal or Inca village. A good example of this comes from the children's zoo at the Sedgwick County Zoo, as they have "world farms" representing domestic animals from Africa, Asia, and the USA.
A LOT of studies around captive hippos were done at DisneyI don't mind for profit zoos and theme park zoos (Disney, Busch Gardens and SeaWorld, etc) because they usually have a lot more money to spare for the animals. Do they always? No. But sometimes can contribute to a lot of beneficial research, a good example of this is Disney's bottlenose dolphins, which they do not have anymore, but when they did, they conducted a lot of studies on them that were made possible by the just about unlimited funds of the Walt Disney Company. Also, these companies usually have a lot more money to donate to in-situ conservation.
Except you can actually get wild counterpartsReindeer
What about Domestic Reindeer?
I think the yak and dromedary are fine, given there are wild populations out there. I also excuse the Bactrian camel because I have an odd soft spot for them.
Except you can actually get wild counterparts
Dromedary Camels represent an interesting case, where the species they were domesticated from has gone extinct and feral camels have more or less taken over that ecological niche.
How??? Feral Dromedaries live in Australia, which has never had an indigenous population of Camelids.
Seriously? I was clearly talking about the populations across the Middle East and North Africa.
~Thylo