Now here's a thorny subject that no doubt will rattle some people but it's something I'm very interested in. We can't get away from the fact the some animals, carnivores generally, pace in captivity. Some people don't see it as a problem, they consider it different to the kind of stereotypical behaviour (such as swaying in elephants or weaving in bears) that is seen in under-stimulated animals. I personally take this point of view, however, the behaviour bothers me because of the public perception of it; stand any length of time watching a pacing cat and you'll hear comments as to how bored the animal is or how sad the situation is. For a long time I've had a desire to study the behaviour (in fact many years a go I did a collage study into pacing in zoo animals. The study was flawed by the fact that the female lion in the study group had given birth and the male was very agitated, pacing and roaring constantly.) and it occurred to me that zoochat might be the perfect tool for collecting data. We zoos enthusiasts visit a lot of zoos and are in a position to quickly amass many hours of observations simply through our visits. By doing so we can increase our understand of pacing behaviour which might be of benefit with regards to a) reducing the behaviour through better design / husbandry techniques, and b) explaining the behaviour to members of the public.
I haven not come up with a definite design for this proposed study as I thought I'd see what the response was like but here are some rough ideas, the study would be exclusively looking at carnivores and I have five hypothesis which I'd like to test, they are; a) felids pace more than canids, b) carnivores kept in social groups pace less than those kept under solitary conditions, c) most pacing occurs along enclosure boundaries that adjoin public areas d) there are different types of pacing behaviour e) enclosure size is correlated to frequency of pacing. (The first four hypothesis are my own the fifth was studied some years ago, the paper would have been published around 2003).
I'd like to test these hypothesises through observations which is where zoochatters come in. there would be no need to go to the zoo especially for the study (unless you wanted to) and it wouldn't take up any more of your time than you'd wanted it to. I will produce an observation form (or maybe just instruct participants as to what info I need) and send it to anyone interested in taking part. I will analyses results when they are returned and anyone helping will receive feed back from the study.
That's about as far as I've thought about the subject so I will wait for feedback and if anyone is interested in helping please PM me. Thanks.
I haven not come up with a definite design for this proposed study as I thought I'd see what the response was like but here are some rough ideas, the study would be exclusively looking at carnivores and I have five hypothesis which I'd like to test, they are; a) felids pace more than canids, b) carnivores kept in social groups pace less than those kept under solitary conditions, c) most pacing occurs along enclosure boundaries that adjoin public areas d) there are different types of pacing behaviour e) enclosure size is correlated to frequency of pacing. (The first four hypothesis are my own the fifth was studied some years ago, the paper would have been published around 2003).
I'd like to test these hypothesises through observations which is where zoochatters come in. there would be no need to go to the zoo especially for the study (unless you wanted to) and it wouldn't take up any more of your time than you'd wanted it to. I will produce an observation form (or maybe just instruct participants as to what info I need) and send it to anyone interested in taking part. I will analyses results when they are returned and anyone helping will receive feed back from the study.
That's about as far as I've thought about the subject so I will wait for feedback and if anyone is interested in helping please PM me. Thanks.