thorney_devil
Well-Known Member
This information is sourced within the zoo
I don't know anything of the situation but....if the cubs are from over-represented parents or are otherwise surplus to the programme's requirements then they could be considered to no longer be part of that programme. And if that is the case then there shouldn't be anything stopping them going to a non-ZAA zoo because they are outside the programme. Just my thoughts.ZYBen said:Can I ask the source of this information? Since when is any animal bred by a program not part if it! and wasn't there something under the new ZAA guidelines that program species can't go to non-ZAA Zoo's?
I don't know anything of the situation but....if the cubs are from over-represented parents or are otherwise surplus to the programme's requirements then they could be considered to no longer be part of that programme. And if that is the case then there shouldn't be anything stopping them going to a non-ZAA zoo because they are outside the programme. Just my thoughts.
I see with some trepidation this happening in quite a few zoos. 1) What is surplus to one region may not be in another ...! 2) If the receiving zoo is not part of a recognised zoo association ... goodness if the animals where required again within the programme (no jurisdiction anymore) 3) Surplus means THE challenge to allow for animals going back to the wild ... too.
So, much for meta population management, ay ...![]()
Indeed, torie it is ....! It is a criticism we can level at almost all conservation breeding programmes when they become successful. It is one area in which conservation breeding zoos of the realm do mostly - alas - excel.
We - zoos - do not look at the other options available nor at the bigger picture nor at true meta population management for a species. In this particular case: snow leopards continue to become rarer and rarer in the wild (and for all its worth those genes of over-represented lines are more than wellcome in very fragmented populations).
Back on topic: what is next up at Taronga?![]()
I don't know anything of the situation but....if the cubs are from over-represented parents or are otherwise surplus to the programme's requirements then they could be considered to no longer be part of that programme. And if that is the case then there shouldn't be anything stopping them going to a non-ZAA zoo because they are outside the programme. Just my thoughts.
Is anyone else a member of zoo friends? What do you think of the new magazine? I have been getting the magazine since 1989 and in my opinion the new one is not as good. There has only been two additions of the new magazine so it can only get better. Just one thing I did notice, including the front and back covers it is 24 pages. Of these pages 2 are full page ads, 3 pages are the kids section, 6 are full page photos, 2 pages are the calendar, 1 is the contents page and only 10 pages are text related to articles of which one is a short meet a keeper type article.
The March 2010 edition of Zoonooz, the final of the old magazine, had 0 full page ads, 2 pages of kids sections, only 3 pages of full page photos(the front and back pages plus one in the magazine), 1 contents page, 0 pages for a calendar and 18 pages of articles.
boof, what does it say in this edition of the Zoo Friends? Any interesting news worth pointing out or not really?