I had some time today, so I just bumped up this thread. This is an exhibit which I invented:
HUMANS AND CATS – 100,000 YEARS TOGETHER
This exhibit, rebuild from fairly traditional cat house, shows all the world’s big cats and some of the small ones. Filled with replicas of world’s great art, it illustrates the cultural history of cats in human consiousness.
ALTAMIRA HALL
At first, visitors enter a dark room, with light on roof illuminating a replica of prehistoric rock paintings. Then they walk through the dark corridor, with patches of light on walls and roofs illustrating replicas of famous paintings of cave lions. There are also cave lions figurines. The information explains how human evolution was shaped by predation by big cats, and how we can deduce cave lion apperance from ancient paintings.
The restoration of saber-toothed smilodon is used to discuss if humans could wipe out ancient megafauna. A phylogenetic tree of all cats is drawn, and cat predatory adaptations are discussed.
FIRST CITIES, FIRST ZOOS
Asiatic lions have a replica of Middle Eastern subtropical savanna. This is the first exhibit, and can also be viewed from outside the house through the moat.
Then we enter the next room. It shows replicas of beautiful Assyrian sculptures showing hunting of persian lions. One amazing Assyrian relief shows a lion released from the cage, presumably for being killed on the arena. That 5000 year old sculpture shows most details still used in zoo transport boxes today. The information discusses the role of lions in ancient world and first zoos in Assyria. 4000 year old and older than most countries and cities today, lion and tiger exhibits were apparently naturalistic walled gardens.
HUNTING EACH OTHER AND TOGETHER
Cheetah and
Caracal are shown in a replica of a subtropical savanna, visually continious with lion exhibit.
Third section details hunting of big cats. It details how the brave hunters outwitted man-eaters at the times when guns were less sophisticated than today. It also discusses how cheetahs and caracals were trained as hunting animals in India.
The path is double, so visitors can go along the row of glass-fronted cat exhibits, or along historical monuments, absorbing the storyline and occassionally looking at the centre of live exhibits.
CAT GODS
Jaguars have a jungle exhibit with mock ruined temple.
Pumas have home in a canyon with replica of Native American rock paintings.
The next section illustrates the role of cats in cultures on the other side of the globe. The first is jaguar in Mesoamerican art. Then there is a discussion of a role of cougar in North American native lucture.
DESTROYING
Eurasian lynx in northern coniferous forest is an example of the species which European range was grealy reduced.
Next section shows how during 19. 20. and 21. century wild cats were massively hunted and just as importantly, their habitat and food animals was anihhilated. There are maps showing shrinking ranges and mounts of extinct cat subspecies.
FASCINATION
Clouded leopards, one of most beautiful cats, are presented in a replica of partially logged Asian rainforest.
This section shows how fear of nature turned into a fascination and cat conservation appeared. There are replicas of Rousseau’s wildlife paintings and pictures of Bagheera from Jungle Book and Aslan from Narnia.
FROM CIRCUSES TO ANIMAL PARKS
Amur leopard is currently the rarest form of big cat and several times more numerous in captivity than in the wild. It is presented in the Far Eastern conifer forest.
The next section shows the history of keeping cats in captivity. Zoo visitors will be fascinated in learning all details of wild cat husbandry: how cats are kept securely, fed, maintained, trained, how zoo vet work looks like. What happens if a lion escapes. They can see a glimpse of actual backdoor exhibits and staff quarters in the house. They also learn about studbooks and breeding programs. And how zoos suport conservation in the wild.
SCIENCE AND STUDY
Snow leopard exhibit replicates Himalayan rocky outcrop amon the rhododendron shrub.
The next section shows how wild cats are studied using telemetry, observation, tracks, scat analysis etc. Artifacts include replicas of pug marks and camera traps. Visitors can hands-on examine bones and hair of tigers prey to identify them and she how telemetric equipment looks like. There is a replica of cat researcher’s primitive tent.
SAVING CATS FOR THE FUTURE
Fishing cat and
lion-tailed macaques are two endangered species which benefited from creation of reserves in the Project Tiger.
Tigers in the replica of rainforest are the last exhibit. Besides the glass view, people can see tigers outside, behind water moat.
This next section shows reserves, the difficulties of warden-poacher wars, deadly trade in cat parts and problems in creating sufficently big reserves. There is also a discussion of how big cats act as umbrella species for protecting other wildlife.
THE CAT MUSEUM
To the right is another building. It shows history of domestic cat. Exhibits include Egyptian cat mummies and films from cat beauty contests. There is discussion of cat breeding and how a vet works like. This may not be very interesting to a true zoo lover, but lots of cat enthusiasts find this part of the zoo most fascinating and it draws lots of extra audience to the zoo.