Wisp O' Mist
Well-Known Member
Cant the SSP people make exceptions for non smugglers
Nowhere in my reply to you did I reference wildlife trafficking. Please take this conversation seriously.
Cant the SSP people make exceptions for non smugglers
New Cant we responsibly breed reptiles etc without making morphs/pet only/inbred?
and the book you referenced is about wildlife trafficking
Like I said earlier, this is what I consider a niche for specialist facilities for different taxa. The ability to hone in focus like that means certain species can get more love. This is especially apparent for ungulates where facilities like White Oak and The Wilds have done wonders for many species.Random thoughts and reflections
Some taxa will lend themselves well to facilities like you describe, either purely dedicated to one taxa, like ICF, or specializing in a group of animals, while also exhibiting other species, like St. Augustine.
Homogenization of collections is a vicious, if somewhat unplanned, cycle. Zoos know that certain animals and experiences are crowd pleasers and gravitate to them, at the expense of other species. Those "shunned' species in turn become less common, which makes the popular ones ever more the "go to" species when other zoos start building new exhibits. The wheel turns, and within a few years, zoo nerds exclaim, "Wait, there used to be _____ at the zoo?!"
Collaboration is key to the long-term sustainability of populations, and that can be strengthened by partnership with non-AZA facilities, private collectors, and hobbyists. It should only be done, however, if it's in a manner that's consistent with the zoo's values and adhering to animal welfare best practices - not just dumping animals that are no longer necessary for an SSP. Every AZA facility is required to have protocol in place for how to responsibly work with non-AZA partners, such as a review process, getting references from other AZA facilities, site visits, etc.
Every zoo needs to have an honest discussion with itself (generally formalized as an Institutional Collection Plan) as to what species it is able to best manage while building an animal collection that adheres to its core goals. In some cases, that will mean phasing some species out in favor of other species. The goal should be to commit to species that you can do well, either by upgrading facilities and holding capacity for those species (going all in, as it were) or phasing out species that won't work for any number of reasons (space, finances, staffing, climate, etc).
It might be wise to see some more zoos take the kind of route that Lincoln Park Zoo took with African Journey -- although the subsequent elephant loss was somewhat unrelated and not part of an immediate phase-out, the pivot away from the large mammal focus in the building really enabled a lot of new reptile, bird and small mammal species to move in, even a few insects, and for the zoo ultimately gained a lot more species than it lost in the process, rather than if the entire building had been transformed into winter holding for a single costly species.
Lincoln Park Zoo has not taken this route with exhibits developed after Regenstein African Journey, with the exception of the Pritzker Family Children's Zoo, which opened in 2004 with over ten species.
The Regenstein African Journey has not set a model for subsequent exhibits at the Lincoln Park Zoo to display a range and a diversity of animal species.
I fear there may have been some kind of misunderstanding here -- I was not intending to suggest the exhibit had already shown influence over Lincoln Park's further plans or those of other facilities at this time. I was intending to mention it as an example that could make a decent blueprint for future renovations at other facilities, particularly those with large indoor buildings currently holding outdated megafauna dayrooms.It's tough to say what influence Regenstein African Journey has had on other AZA zoos and how they redevelop large animal exhibits. It did receive a 2005 AZA Exhibit Award for Significant Achievement. I am having difficulty thinking of any AZA exhibit that has clearly followed in its footsteps.
That's correct. Three species were cut from Pepper Family Wildlife Center to expand space for current residents, three carnivores were cut from the former bear line to expand space for polar bears and the new penguin habitat, and six seabirds left the collection when the Penguin-Seabird House was razed and replaced with the macaques. A few birds and small mammals have left the collection in this time as well.Chimpanzees and gorillas got new exhibits when the Regenstein Center for African Apes opened in 2005. Opening in 2014, the Regenstein Macaque Forest provided an exhibit for Japanese macaques. Two exhibits opened in 2016 for a total of 2 animal species; the Walter Family Arctic Tundra for polar bears, and the Pritzker Penguin Cove for African penguins. The Pepper Family Wildlife Center, an exhibit focused on African lions, opened most recently in 2021. Exhibits for red pandas, snow leopards, and Canadian lynx are also included in the Wildlife Center, but these old exhibits received only minimal changes. That's a total of five major new multimillion dollar exhibits for a total of six species of animals!
This is the irony of the situation that I somewhat fear - that the focus on the welfare and sensitivity of certain species is, in fact, contributing even further to making these species a greater focus for both zoos and visitors.Returning to the AZA trends document, if there is increasing concern about the welfare and display of large animals it might drive an increased focus on those large animals. Zoos may be unwilling to completely lose these large species and so pursue them even if it means losing, or not including, other animal species that could be cared for more easily and ethically.
This is my other concern. I think a zoo that could theoretically hold three hundred smaller animals or a few large animals will naturally select the latter option. The more space taken up by popular megafauna, the more less charismatic species become expendable. This is well understandable to a point, but I worry it may not be sustainable over time.Most large animals will not disappear from AZA zoos with this focus on large animals, even with increasing concerns about their welfare, and would face a far lesser danger of disappearing than smaller, especially less charismatic, species.
Even with this help, the diversity of Bovidae and Cervidae species will likely continue to decrease in AZA facilities.
A single bad incident can be enough to dissuade zoos from experimenting with mixed species exhibits and to remove one or more species from mixed-species displays.
The future for many species of Bovidae and Cervidae in AZA zoos seems far more challenging and uncertain than that for more charismatic large animals.
I'm not going to dispute anything you've said, however I think there's an overwhelming opinion on Zoo Chat that more species diversity amongst zoos is a good thing, and I question as it relates to ungulates whether that is truly the right approach. I know countless AZA zoos that in totality are smaller than a single paddock at San Diego Zoo Safari Park or The Wilds. To any of these zoos, investing in an antelope species means setting aside a relatively large amount of space for a relatively simple exhibit of a species most visitors aren't going to pay much attention to.Where Fewer Deer and Antelope Play
One important distinction that I neglected to make in my earlier posts here is that the situation for Bovidae (the antelope) and Cervidae (the deer) in AZA facilities is very different than that for other large mammals. The trend has been for the Bovidae and Cervidae to be significant space losers in AZA zoos.
This trend has been in evidence for a while now. The 2014 AZA ungulate TAG mid-year meetings made mention of a loss of nearly 1,000 spaces for antelope alone since the 1999 space surveys (2014 Midyear Meeting - presentations — AZA Ungulates). The Bison, Buffalo, Cattle, and Camelid TAG warned of significant lack of interest that threatened the sustainability of these bovid populations. The Cervid TAG Update had a graph that appears to show a loss of a third of cervid spaces from 2005-2013. Things haven't improved in the past ten years since those updates.
There are only a handful of Bovidae and Cervidae exhibits that AZA zoos seem interested in. Those exhibits for large species include:
1. Peaceful species that can mix well with other species, especially giraffes and or zebras, in large open African exhibits
2. Bongo antelope
3. Yellow-backed duiker to mix with bongos or okapis
4. American bison
5. Elk for displays of native wildlife, or mixed with bison
6. Takin for Asian exhibits
7. A species that does well in the local climatic conditions. Like Rocky Mountain goats in northwestern zoos and Arabian oryx in the southwest. This is more so the case where the climate poses some limitations on the effective husbandry of other species.
8. Domestic goats, cows, and sheep for children's zoos
There are of course some exceptions. There is a dedicated exhibit for sable antelope in the Scott African Grasslands at Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo.
The lack of quantity of spaces for large Bovidae and Cervidae and the limited variety of exhibits that AZA zoos are interested in will challenge the sustainability of these populations. Were it not for a handful of facilities with a lot of space and large holdings, most notably the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, many Bovidae and Cervidae populations would be very small and unsustainable in AZA zoos. Working with AZA accredited related facilities will help zoos maintain some of these ungulate populations. Even with this help, the diversity of Bovidae and Cervidae species will likely continue to decrease in AZA facilities.
Increasing concern about animal welfare may actually exacerbate the unsustainability of Bovidae and Cervidae populations. Visitors like to see hoofstock in large herds. Watching competitive matches between males might be entertaining, but when it results in serious injuries or deaths the North American zoo-going public will become upset. Separating males requires a larger quantity of individual spaces and may make the public concerned about the loneliness of separated males. There is now increased scrutiny and criticism about zoos sending excess male animals to facilities outside of the AZA with poorer standards. For those species that cannot be kept in bachelor herds, managing male Bovidae and Cervidae animals to high welfare standards is challenging and may threaten the long-term viability of some species within AZA.
Welfare concerns in mixed-species exhibits pose additional limitations to Bovidae and Cervidae populations. No AZA zoo wants their animals to be seriously injured or killed from interspecific aggression or accidents. A single bad incident can be enough to dissuade zoos from experimenting with mixed species exhibits and to remove one or more species from mixed-species displays.
A major concern for the welfare of captive large animals has been adequate enclosure space. Exhibits for Bovidae and Cervidae tend to be fairly large relative to that for other animals. That has the double disadvantage of being difficult to accommodate where space at the zoo is limited and makes them more likely to be replaced by more charismatic large animals that need a lot of space.
The future for many species of Bovidae and Cervidae in AZA zoos seems far more challenging and uncertain than that for more charismatic large animals. Bongo, American bison, and a handful of others will remain and do well. Overall, in the near future, you will probably see fewer deer and antelope play in AZA zoos.
I think there's an overwhelming opinion on Zoo Chat that more species diversity amongst zoos is a good thing, and I question as it relates to ungulates whether that is truly the right approach