@USZOOfan42, my home zoo is SDZ.
That's quite the distance from the zoo you initially called your home zoo before changing your mind and editing your response
@USZOOfan42, my home zoo is SDZ.
I lived in Madrid for some time in my childhood, and then moved to the U.S. So, yes, in a way I consider that my home zoo is SD and MadridThat's quite the distance from the zoo you initially called your home zoo before changing your mind and editing your response![]()
I lived in Madrid for some time in my childhood, and then moved to the U.S. So, yes, in a way I consider that my home zoo is SD and Madrid.
You got me there. I really didn't want to say where I lived, that's way I put cincy, but then I thought to myself that liyng wasn't the way so I changed it. Sorry!That doesn't explain why you initially said Cincinnati though![]()
Since they have all those exhibits, why isn't attendance higher? Or at least why doesn't it stay at a stable rate?Madrid zoo is clearly capable of building good habitats like the exhibits for orangutans, pandas, giraffes, elephants, gorillas etc.
Madrid zoo has quite a problem with a lot of activists. My friends over Spain tell me that with the outdated exhibit and with the dolphin shows they're getting a lot of negative backlash. It's big problem and one I'm very sad about.![]()
If madrid gave up animals like elephants, gorillas, big cats or dolphins surley the attendace of the zoo would be affected in some way. I'm not saying that the zoo would lose a lot of their visitors, but quite a few.
Maybe I'm confused and I said it, but madrid zoo has a stable rate of people, I think it has shrunken a little bit after the pandemic, not sure abou that. While yes I agree with you that there's no proof that losing recogniced animals will afect the attendace, but losing the species mentioned+the bad husbandry would be an explosive mix in my opinion. Anyway, I do think we have overexploited the Madrid zoo topic, so it's better to give it a rest for a while.Since they have all those exhibits, why isn't attendance higher? Or at least why doesn't it stay at a stable rate?
Oh, I do understand the feeling. However you should probably be more positive about the situation (at least according to my experiences).
Over here there have been some major "scandals" at my "local"(not really but it is the one I consider the most local, since it's the easiest to get to) zoo. Every time there are protests, news articles, people vowing to never return and even intervention by the government but at the end of the day everything continues as normal, people come back and everything is forgotten, because it is proven that it wasn't actually the zoo's fault.
I agree with @lintworm here. You can never be sure. My local zoo has lost over the years white lions, white tigers, jaguars of both colour morphs and still (though the only evidence I have is that they continued expanding more and more, thus indicating plenty of cash) attendance seems to not have fallen. (And yes right now they do have elephants and dolphins, however the elephants are a quite recent addition and popularity was always high even before them)
Another solution might be to displace some of the buildings to a different location? I don't really know how that works practically but I know it can be done in some cases. This could help de-cluster a lot of urban zoos.
Yeah I can definitely see how that would be inpractical... still an option zoos should keep in mind, especially for smaller buildings.Most of the Ménagerie's buildings (Big Cat House, Monkey House, Rotunda...) are quite heavy, it wouldn't make sense to displace them elsewhere. That applies also to the smaller stables and pavilions for hoofstock, typical from the 19th century (especially if they are replaced by more conventional animal houses).