But they could have held off breeding until they had a group of more similar origin.
But he has 1.2, breedable zebras so why would he want to get more when he has no interest in holding a pure subspecies? As I mentioned before, I reckon Mr Bush simply acquired what was available to him. His priority was to keep and breed zebras as part of his visitor attraction, there being no more meaningful agenda than that. Perhaps you are suggesting that he should want to hold only Grant's or only Chapman's? As I have said, I don't approve of crossing zebra subspecies but I am not going to dictate others preferences. It is highly unlikely that such hybrids will make their way into the collections of more responsible and moral owners so at the end of the day little harm has been done.
Whipsnade can afford to be choosy as they are in a strong position in the world zoo comunity. Mr Bush, due to his own faults, does not hold such. It would be understandable that when a collection has to resort to buying otherwise freely-available animals it goes for the cheapest or most easily accessible which in this case happened to be two different races.
Really what you have to understand is that many Zoochatters agendas are taxonomically-driven, we can afford to be idealists, we are not the average visitors that zoos require to survive. Things are different in the real zoo world where proprietors have to carefully offset concientious animal management against public relations and the relentless effort to keep folk coming through the gates where they may conflict. This is especially the case for zoos such as NAZF where doors that would be open to many of the mainstreanm collections are closed.
But he has 1.2, breedable zebras so why would he want to get more when he has no interest in holding a pure subspecies? As I mentioned before, I reckon Mr Bush simply acquired what was available to him. His priority was to keep and breed zebras as part of his visitor attraction, there being no more meaningful agenda than that. Perhaps you are suggesting that he should want to hold only Grant's or only Chapman's? As I have said, I don't approve of crossing zebra subspecies but I am not going to dictate others preferences. It is highly unlikely that such hybrids will make their way into the collections of more responsible and moral owners so at the end of the day little harm has been done.
Whipsnade can afford to be choosy as they are in a strong position in the world zoo comunity. Mr Bush, due to his own faults, does not hold such. It would be understandable that when a collection has to resort to buying otherwise freely-available animals it goes for the cheapest or most easily accessible which in this case happened to be two different races.
Really what you have to understand is that many Zoochatters agendas are taxonomically-driven, we can afford to be idealists, we are not the average visitors that zoos require to survive. Things are different in the real zoo world where proprietors have to carefully offset concientious animal management against public relations and the relentless effort to keep folk coming through the gates where they may conflict. This is especially the case for zoos such as NAZF where doors that would be open to many of the mainstreanm collections are closed.