Ape enclosures are usually see-through. But rainforest is so thick that it is impossible to see for more than few meters.
Forest animals usually cannot see the sky or other group members. Friends reported 'visiting' mountain gorillas in Uganda that were feeding 2-3 meters away, but they saw only few bits of fur and lots of noises.
In zoos, many animals unusually often tease or punish other members of the group.
Zoo world understands that 1-2 hiding places are good, but there should be more. And animals should hide not just from visitors, but mostly from each other. Some zoos casually solved this by giving gorillas several exhibits, so they spread out of each others view.
I wonder if gorillas, other apes and forest animals could be made happier by much more visual barriers. Far, far more than now. So that animal in no point of exhibit can see more than a small bit of it. Naturally, apes destroy plants, so there could be rows of branches or poles, vertical sheets of plastic or metal painted into leaf pattern, or outside, patches of bamboo or thick bush protected by a wire etc. Naturally, one should arrange them perpendicular to viewing areas, so visitors can see animals!
Anybody thinks the same?
Forest animals usually cannot see the sky or other group members. Friends reported 'visiting' mountain gorillas in Uganda that were feeding 2-3 meters away, but they saw only few bits of fur and lots of noises.
In zoos, many animals unusually often tease or punish other members of the group.
Zoo world understands that 1-2 hiding places are good, but there should be more. And animals should hide not just from visitors, but mostly from each other. Some zoos casually solved this by giving gorillas several exhibits, so they spread out of each others view.
I wonder if gorillas, other apes and forest animals could be made happier by much more visual barriers. Far, far more than now. So that animal in no point of exhibit can see more than a small bit of it. Naturally, apes destroy plants, so there could be rows of branches or poles, vertical sheets of plastic or metal painted into leaf pattern, or outside, patches of bamboo or thick bush protected by a wire etc. Naturally, one should arrange them perpendicular to viewing areas, so visitors can see animals!
Anybody thinks the same?