Lafone
Well-Known Member
I was looking at the annual stock list for Whipsnade recently and I was wondering about the public nature of the animal audit in some zoos.
ZSL Whipsnade and London and Marwell zoo etc here in the U.K. create some news stories around counting the stock with footage of keepers counting the seven otters they know they have etc and animals standing next to blackboards and what have you. Of course a side benefit is the publication of stock lists and annual counts from zoos who do it, which doesn’t seem to be that common but is great as a Zoo enthusiast!
Obviously stock lists and knowing where the animals are and in what number are important to any zoo. It stands to reason you don’t wait all year to check you have four lions, for example. But in some animals like rodents or insects they might be harder to keep track of I guess?
So I wondered how often stock takes / overall counts and ‘whole zoo’ audits are done, is an annual count standard practice or does it all completely vary across different zoos or countries?
Does it align to insurance or to animal programme management or is it institution specific?
I also wondered whether there is a hard link between the activity being annual and the publicity (as it can generate some nice coverage) and if the publicity is a driver or a side benefit?
ZSL Whipsnade and London and Marwell zoo etc here in the U.K. create some news stories around counting the stock with footage of keepers counting the seven otters they know they have etc and animals standing next to blackboards and what have you. Of course a side benefit is the publication of stock lists and annual counts from zoos who do it, which doesn’t seem to be that common but is great as a Zoo enthusiast!
Obviously stock lists and knowing where the animals are and in what number are important to any zoo. It stands to reason you don’t wait all year to check you have four lions, for example. But in some animals like rodents or insects they might be harder to keep track of I guess?
So I wondered how often stock takes / overall counts and ‘whole zoo’ audits are done, is an annual count standard practice or does it all completely vary across different zoos or countries?
Does it align to insurance or to animal programme management or is it institution specific?
I also wondered whether there is a hard link between the activity being annual and the publicity (as it can generate some nice coverage) and if the publicity is a driver or a side benefit?