i thought a junior keeper accidentally left the gate unlocked and so the jaguar managed to get into the tiger exhibit, so they yelled at the tiger (who didn't like loud noises) who then backed away into her house
Yes - most Regulations and Standards in Australian States owe their origin to the work originally done in NSW. However, State egos usually mean that each State puts it's own little twist to the regs somewhere. There is currently a push by the Federal government to introduce National Standards and Guidelines for Exhibited Animal Welfare. It would be wonderful if it would eventuate but already some States are acting a bit independent.
Maybe they didn't want to say this on the TV show to make it all more dramatic. I wonder whether the book has the true story?
It would be a positive thing to see federal guidelines. Maybe we could see a streamlining of available species to be kept in Australia (both publically and privately) in the future.
There have been many examples of animals in zoos- cats, apes, antelopes, living behind certain barriers quite contentedly until one day when something(extreme panic, anger etc) causes them to prove they can escape the enclosure, whether its by climbing, leaping, swimming or whatever.
To Pertnax and okapipr,
Do you really mean this?! Aren´t you exagerating (spelling?... pretty sure it is wrong) a bit now? If you are right, basically every zoo animal´s and zoo visitor´s lives would be in danger. I mean, there are more or less scientifically proved data on how, for instance, this or that species can jump (etc), aren´t there.
To Pertnax and okapipr,
Do you really mean this?! Aren´t you exagerating (spelling?... pretty sure it is wrong) a bit now? If you are right, basically every zoo animal´s and zoo visitor´s lives would be in danger. I mean, there are more or less scientifically proved data on how, for instance, this or that species can jump (etc), aren´t there.
I would have thought that enough experience would have been gathered now.
Looked what happened at San Francisco Zoo. The walls and moats were higher than the recommended, yet the tiger escaped. At the Los Angeles Zoo, they raised the side walls of the tiger exhibit by about 2-3 feet after the SF zoo attack.
So what are your conclusions? Should all predators in a zoo, that could threat a human being, be kept within mesh wire?
And what about the other species that can pose a threat to humankind?
If you are right, basically every zoo animal´s and zoo visitor´s lives would be in danger. I mean, there are more or less scientifically proved data on how, for instance, this or that species can jump (etc), aren´t there.
Unfortunately [in some ways] the two areas are not really linked.
The government legislates the Standards.
ARAZPA "legislates" the species that this region will keep.
Politics and zoopolitics!
OK.
So what are your conclusions? Should all predators in a zoo, that could threat a human being, be kept within mesh wire?
And what about the other species that can pose a threat to humankind?
Actually scratch that. Most species are more intelligent than architects.