Sun Wukong
Well-Known Member
A subject brought up in various subjects before: should modern zoos specialise more on displaying animals native to the country the individual zoos is located at? Or are "exotic" animals still needed to get the visitors in?
In some aspects, the situation differs from country to country: an African surely has plenty of the popular megafauna as native animals, may they be lions, elephants or giraffes (though he/she surely appretiates the "exotic" factor of say a Brown bear or a tiger at the local zoo). Australian/NZ zoos have native species like koalas, salties, kiwis or kangaroos odd, "dangerous" or cute enough to get the visitors into the zoo -and, as one user mentioned before- an Australian zoo is somehow expected by tourists to have these "typical animals". However, I assume that native Australians/NZs surely like seeing animals like bears or zebras exotic to them in the zoo than being presented the bush turkey or possum they have in their backyard at home for free.
The situation is similar in South America and most parts of Asia, but differs in the zoo-rich countries of North America, partly Russia and Europe; especially in the case of the latter, native species are usually not too popular and scarcely presented in zoos. While most European or North American zoos always have a few local species in their collection, it's usually always the same few: wolves, bears, bobcats/lynx, deer (mostly forms/subspecies of the Red Deer as well as fallow deer), a few owls/birds of prey, ibex, bison/wisent. There are a few zoos or "wildparks" that specialise in keeping the native species, but usually they end up with the ones mentioned above and, in the case of Europeans, adding domestic animals and North American species. There are many reasons for this, especially in regard to the European fauna:
-a lack of popular megavertebrates and animals with "show qualities"
-a certain lack of coloration (especially notable in the case of many European smaller animals)
-increased difficulty considering husbandry: many European wild animals tend to be difficult when it comes to feeding, enclosures, habitat recreation, veterinary aspects etc.
-a lack of interest by the public ("not exotic enough")/ good presentation
-a lack of touristic interest, maybe?
I haven't heard of any tourist looking for capercaillies, European Hamsters or Great Bustards in an European zoo (excluding certain zoo-fans). The only thing going into that direction were visitors at Scandinavian zoos complaining if moose were not displayed...
Popular media seems to have taken notice of that; the following sketch is from an Austrian comedy duo making fun of an Austrian Alpenzoo, a zoo specialized in keeping European Wildlife (see Innsbruck Alpenzoo). For those who do not speak German: the protagonist is angrily complaining that the native animals in his Alpenzoo are boring and not interesting enough for the public ("Stupid Golden eagles & drunken chamois"). He marvels at the sight of a cockatoo he saw in a zoo in Miami and envies Berlin zoo for having Knut-which prompts him to the idea of misusing long-term philosophy students to get the visitors in...
In some aspects, the situation differs from country to country: an African surely has plenty of the popular megafauna as native animals, may they be lions, elephants or giraffes (though he/she surely appretiates the "exotic" factor of say a Brown bear or a tiger at the local zoo). Australian/NZ zoos have native species like koalas, salties, kiwis or kangaroos odd, "dangerous" or cute enough to get the visitors into the zoo -and, as one user mentioned before- an Australian zoo is somehow expected by tourists to have these "typical animals". However, I assume that native Australians/NZs surely like seeing animals like bears or zebras exotic to them in the zoo than being presented the bush turkey or possum they have in their backyard at home for free.
The situation is similar in South America and most parts of Asia, but differs in the zoo-rich countries of North America, partly Russia and Europe; especially in the case of the latter, native species are usually not too popular and scarcely presented in zoos. While most European or North American zoos always have a few local species in their collection, it's usually always the same few: wolves, bears, bobcats/lynx, deer (mostly forms/subspecies of the Red Deer as well as fallow deer), a few owls/birds of prey, ibex, bison/wisent. There are a few zoos or "wildparks" that specialise in keeping the native species, but usually they end up with the ones mentioned above and, in the case of Europeans, adding domestic animals and North American species. There are many reasons for this, especially in regard to the European fauna:
-a lack of popular megavertebrates and animals with "show qualities"
-a certain lack of coloration (especially notable in the case of many European smaller animals)
-increased difficulty considering husbandry: many European wild animals tend to be difficult when it comes to feeding, enclosures, habitat recreation, veterinary aspects etc.
-a lack of interest by the public ("not exotic enough")/ good presentation
-a lack of touristic interest, maybe?
Popular media seems to have taken notice of that; the following sketch is from an Austrian comedy duo making fun of an Austrian Alpenzoo, a zoo specialized in keeping European Wildlife (see Innsbruck Alpenzoo). For those who do not speak German: the protagonist is angrily complaining that the native animals in his Alpenzoo are boring and not interesting enough for the public ("Stupid Golden eagles & drunken chamois"). He marvels at the sight of a cockatoo he saw in a zoo in Miami and envies Berlin zoo for having Knut-which prompts him to the idea of misusing long-term philosophy students to get the visitors in...
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