Sun Wukong
Well-Known Member
@tigertiger: So the locomotion the orcas are trained to show in their performance are the reason not to keep them? Does that mean that if a zoo trained their coatis or meerkats to perform on cue daily, do jumps on signal and (well, that would require several of them...) carry their keepers, it would also become morally suspicious to keep them in zoos? Brno Zoo, to name an example, offers lunch and (occasionally) dinner with a tiger sitting (behind glass in its enclosure) next to your dinner table. Zoos like Hagenbeck offer special events for their visitors that involve their animals, including elephants. Hannover and others even build huge buildings on zoo grounds just for that purpose.
Commercialism is all too frequent in zoos with a lot of animals-as no public wild animal husbandry can exist without anyone paying for it. Why orcas should be an exception, is beyond me.
In quite a lot of species kept in zoos (including several invertebrate species, like tarantulas) or sold by the millions as pets, we don't know the average (!) life span in the wild. That would be worth more than study. Given the continous animal loss observed in various zoos and private households in regard to these animals, their presence with us might also be a comparabily shorter one; yet I hardly ever hear anyone complain about that...
"Gut" feeling is not the most reliable source of information-especially after the consumption of chilli or White Castle burgers...
Thanks for that interesting link; one of the Japanese facilitioes (the whaling musuem) appears to be especially interesting. Wouldn't that be an interesting (yet nevertheless rather expensive) alternative to disprove the assumption that no enclosure can be big enough for orcas-fencing in a fjord?
Commercialism is all too frequent in zoos with a lot of animals-as no public wild animal husbandry can exist without anyone paying for it. Why orcas should be an exception, is beyond me.
In quite a lot of species kept in zoos (including several invertebrate species, like tarantulas) or sold by the millions as pets, we don't know the average (!) life span in the wild. That would be worth more than study. Given the continous animal loss observed in various zoos and private households in regard to these animals, their presence with us might also be a comparabily shorter one; yet I hardly ever hear anyone complain about that...
"Gut" feeling is not the most reliable source of information-especially after the consumption of chilli or White Castle burgers...
Thanks for that interesting link; one of the Japanese facilitioes (the whaling musuem) appears to be especially interesting. Wouldn't that be an interesting (yet nevertheless rather expensive) alternative to disprove the assumption that no enclosure can be big enough for orcas-fencing in a fjord?