sooty mangabey
Well-Known Member
To me it boils down to bad population management. We aren't talking about a large herd of unmanaged deer that requires regular culling; it's a small herd of giraffes where breeding can be easily controlled in the first place. Marius should not have been bred. Period.
While I feel the arguments on both sides - and there are excellent arguments for culling, and for not culling - have been made well, I think the refutation of this point, made several times, has not been made.
The implication here, from @zooish (and previously from others) is that the breeding of an unwanted calf must have been a mistake, due to poor management.
However, there is an argument which would suggest that the raising of young is a vital part of the natural behaviour of a captive animal, and as such is the best form of behavioural enrichment. Thus, stopping animals from breeding simply because it will not be possible to house the young might be seen as being irresponsible and even, to use an emotive word used many times in this debate, cruel. Far more humane to allow animals to mate, breed, raise young, and then, at the time when, in the wild, the young would leave the parent(s), humanely cull those youngsters....
I appreciate, of course, that other opinions are available.....