Jungle Man
Well-Known Member
I will also add my point of view to this thread:And why would your employee say anything that contradicts what you claim
Excellent point but one small, pedantic correction. The bison reintroductions, spearheaded by the American Bison Society, were founded at the Bronx Zoo by their first director William T. Hornaday who used to work for the Smithsonian which is probably where the confusion comes from.
But yes, I am still waiting for Mr. Aspinall's suggestions for what we do with all the Kihansi Spray Toads, Panamanian Golden Toads, Wyoming Toads, Partula snails, Mexican splitfins, Mexican Wolf, Red Wolf, Lake Victoria cichlids, Pere David's Deer, Vietnamese Sika, Hawaiian Crows, Guam Kingfishers, Guam Rails, Socorro Doves, Alagoas Curassows, Seychelles Giant Tortoises, Scimitar-Horned Oryx, and many others which only survive today due to human intervention.
Are your own social media posts misquoting you?
Obviously there are examples of animals being saved in-situ, no one said there weren't, however you are STILL ignoring the topic of the animals which do rely on ex-situ conservation, which is the question I asked before you moved the goalpost.
What rhino hybrid? There are no hybrid white rhinos in captivity, there are no hybrid Black rhinos in captivity, and there are no hybrid Indian rhinos in captivity. There aren't any taxa for any of these species to hybridize with so what exactly are you referring to?
~Thylo
- I am from Panama and I can see forehand the effects ex-situ conservation of the Panamanian Golden Frog has brought. While you would say that zoos are bad, AZA accredited zoos that have them are one of the reasons they aren't extinct. Chytridiomycosis expanded its range and they are now extinct in the wild, the only center that cares for them in Panama is funded by the Houston Zoo and AZA. If we maintained them in-situ we wouldn't see the results we are currently having on their conservation.
- Their population is increasing in captivity and scientists from Smithsonian are trying to stop or decrease chytridiomycosis, when it happens there could be a possibility for them to be returned to the wild. If a group of Panamanian Golden Frogs is released now, they would die soon because the threats in their environment just keep increasing.
Panay Cloudrunner. The entire captive population is located in Plzen Zoo. After an accident on a Panay Cloudrunner breeding center in the Philippines, almost all the insurance population was lost. Now, a single event like a natural disaster, a disease outbreak or just continued habitat loss can wipe out this species. If the captive population was stable, Panay Cloudrunners would be at least risk. This is the reason why zoos are important, because in case a species dissapear from the wild, they are there to breed it and avoid that. Without them, certainly the Panamanian Golden Frogs would be extinct and countless other species as mentioned by other Zoochatters.