Which brings me back to articles, not to peer-reviewed studies. And once again it's about a single orka and a single elephant, not really a representation of the majority of zoo animals in modern zoos.Bob Jacobs study Heading ..the neural cruelty of captivity is a great start.
What research? These studies are about wild (including reïntroduced) populations, not captive ones.that's great but i was referring to the research he did on zoo collections
After going through most of the thread I can only conclude that there is clearly one person with a closed mindset, and definitively not a scientific mindset. You repeat that you find at least the vast majority of enclosures to be substandard and infringing on animal welfare. As I stated before, the zero-hypothesis would be that there is no difference between wild and captive animals. Both captivity and the wild life have their perks and downsides (Nature is no Disney movie, something some people tend to forget). This means that it's up to you to prove that zoos have a negative effect on animal welfare even in the better exhibits based on peer-reviewed studies. If you can prove that, it's up to us to prove you wrong with studies countering the other studies. That's how science works, and it's the most objective way of arguing about such a subject. You evade giving specific studies that prove your claims, and when people bring up studies that argue that animal-welfare isn't a problem in captivity in certain cases you avoid talking about them.
I'm not saying that every species can be kept in an ethical, practical and sustainable way in captivity. Scientific peer-reviewed studies clearly show that questions can be posed about certain species like painted dogs, cheetah and polar bears. Other species like orka display so much stereotypical behavior and are impossible to house a sustainable population of that it would be better to phase them out. For other species studies suggest that no apparent problem is present anymore in modern zoos.
And finally some studies that already disapprove with your opinions but bring forth a more nuanced way of thinking instead of the black-white thinking:
Species differences in responses to captivity: stress, welfare and the comparative method (
doi:10.1016/j.tree. 2010.08.011)
A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF CORTISOL LEVELS IN WILD AND CAPTIVE ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN (Tursiops truncatus), KILLER WHALE, (Orcinus orca), AND BELUGA WHALE (Delphinapterus leucas).
Natural behavioural biology as a risk factor in carnivore welfare: How analysing species differences could help zoos improve enclosures