One of the recurrent themes here in the last couple years has been the shrinking diversity of antelope species in zoos.
Are there any zoos that have done a good job of getting their visitors excited about antelope species? Are there any outstanding antelope exhibits from the perspective of making the animals interesting to people beyond having them glance at the animal and say "oh it's a pretty deer" and walking on to the next exhibit?
I've talked with several people who find the San Diego Wild Animal Park dull because most of the animals there are antelope. The old monorail and the new tram tour still look at antelope more than anything else.
I think that a good safari guide can make a great difference in getting people enthused about antelope, and maybe a live presentation like that is the only way to do it. If that is the case then maybe the only effective way to meaningfully interpret antelope is at places with really large exhibits that have some kind of "safari" ride component (e.g., Dallas Zoo's Africa monorail, SD Safari Park, Disney's safari ride). Obviously most zoos don't have this available.
It seems like antelope are going to keep losing zoo exhibit space unless better ways can be found to interpret them to the public. Does anybody have examples or ideas of how to do this in a normal zoo where there is no monorail or safari guide to interpret behavior, ecology, etc.?
Are there any zoos that have done a good job of getting their visitors excited about antelope species? Are there any outstanding antelope exhibits from the perspective of making the animals interesting to people beyond having them glance at the animal and say "oh it's a pretty deer" and walking on to the next exhibit?
I've talked with several people who find the San Diego Wild Animal Park dull because most of the animals there are antelope. The old monorail and the new tram tour still look at antelope more than anything else.
I think that a good safari guide can make a great difference in getting people enthused about antelope, and maybe a live presentation like that is the only way to do it. If that is the case then maybe the only effective way to meaningfully interpret antelope is at places with really large exhibits that have some kind of "safari" ride component (e.g., Dallas Zoo's Africa monorail, SD Safari Park, Disney's safari ride). Obviously most zoos don't have this available.
It seems like antelope are going to keep losing zoo exhibit space unless better ways can be found to interpret them to the public. Does anybody have examples or ideas of how to do this in a normal zoo where there is no monorail or safari guide to interpret behavior, ecology, etc.?