Sorry, ANYhuis, but that`s what zoos do, putting wild animals in captivity and taking their freedom away from them. I am NOT against zoos, and I think it`s ethically ok to keep wild animals in captivity, under the condition that their welfare comes first and is ALWAYS the TOP priority. This is what we owe them for taking their freedom away so that humans can see and enjoy them. And I have seen far too many things in zoos to blindly believe that zoos always fulfill that duty (and I have met a lot of frustrated zoo professionals who think the same!!). No, they don`t, many decisions are made that are against the wellbeing of zoo animals, and millions of dollars are wasted on enclosures that are still not satisfying the animal`s needs, but just look nice for the visitors. Elephants are a great example for that and their situation is especially bad in (still far too) many zoos, in Europe and in the US. Much has changed but we`re still far, far from where I want to see zoos. You just need to realise that the AZA still says having herds of 3 females is fine - NO that`s NOT!! Female eles are such complex animals that they need much bigger, complex groups. But the AZA still allows that at least half of all ele keeping zoos have just 2 females, and the AZA allows them to keep "widow" females alone for many months and in case of Dallas and San Antonio, in totally inadequate enclosures. The AZA is not aggressivly tackling this and many other problems, because that would mean that many zoos would loose their crowd-pullers, and I am actually thankful that outside organisations are putting pressure on zoos to improve. I am very aware that IDA/Peta are against zoos at all, but am very confident that this idea is not supported by enough people to bring zoos in danger.