This isn't strictly true. In Judaism there are two elements to the Adam story, one that we can make use of the natural resources of the world but another that we are custodians and must use this wisely.
The meanings of the names Adam and Eve are basically Earth (Adama) and Life (chava, chai). People were of the Earth, an integral part of the environment with a responsibility to look after it with clear consequences if we don't. It's true that this element of our relationship with the world has been over-looked by many of all faiths but this sense of balance is still there in much of Jewish philosophy.
Also many of the commandments in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament concern animal welfare. The Noachide Laws (laws which applied to everyone, not just Jews) included not tearing flesh from a living animal and there is a commandment to remove a bird from it's nest by shooing it away before taking eggs so as not to cause distress to the bird. Young animals can't be removed from their mother before weaning and a mother animal and it's kid cannot be slaughtered together.
Milk and meat cannot be mixed based on a commandment not to boil a kid in its mother's milk. No reason is given but many attribute this in part to a sense that eating meat is inevitable if not desirable therefore it should be done with a sense of dignity for the animal and awareness of the fact that a life has been taken in order for you to eat.
There are clear indications that in an ideal future we would all be vegetarian.
There is another commandment of Baal Tashchit which originally referred to being wasteful or unnecessarily destructive, particularly in times of war but is now applied by many to our relationship with the environment.
Sorry if I'm waffling but this is something close to my heart and while it is true that many don't apply this philosophy in the world today, Judaism has a lot to say about ethical living concerning our relationship with the natural world.
Thankyou friend for your interesting reply , i respect your faith whatever it is , however i think religeon should be firmly separated from zoological gardens it simply isnt right to mix the two together it send wrong signals to the younger generation and can easily be abused for indoctrination. There are even zoos in the world based upon the biblical story of Noah , that to me is insane and i would never take my wife or children to such a zoological garden as that.