There have always been plenty in UK zoos- forming an increasingly important back-up population now perhaps.
I beg to differ actually.There have always been plenty in UK zoos- forming an increasingly important back-up population now perhaps.
I wasn't suggesting that to date there has been any real connection between the captive and wild populations. Free-breeders in zoos, there may also have been population controls on this species which is very well represented in UK zoos.(From memory there are groups, some of them sizeable; at Chester, London, Paignton, Jersey, Marwell, Newquay(?) Dudley, Thrigby(?) Drusillas, Howletts -and probably more)I beg to differ actually.
Aside and sadly, the interest and commitment from the ex situ captive-breeding / conservation breeding community as not always been that much of a significant deterrant to their continued decline in the wilds in north-eastern Sulawesi nor assisting in stabilising populations. At times, the program has been in a stalemate with no or no significant breeding in zoos.
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The captive population is now more important than ever.But maybe with the increasing rarity in the wild, this population might now become more important?