Gender and Age of Zoochatters

Gender and Age


  • Total voters
    344
  • Poll closed .
Strange, I got the impression zoo keeping sort of started out as a man's job. I doubt you would have seen many women doing it in the 50s/60s.
 
The late John Aspinall did not employ women keepers for many years as he felt they would be a distraction for the male keepers!
 
Strange, I got the impression zoo keeping sort of started out as a man's job. I doubt you would have seen many women doing it in the 50s/60s.

You are 100% correct. In that era the only ladies employed in animal positions were probably those in a few places such as London Zoo's Children's zoo as 'grooms' for the ponies and to tend the other domestics. Plus Twycross Zoo employed mainly ladies from its earliest stages too.

I noticed the changeover everywhere else gathering pace in the 80/90's period. Now there is a major reversal.
 
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It looks like Snowleopard's original estimation of 80:20 is pretty close - at the time of posting this 14 out of 70 are female (which is exactly 20%).

:p

Hix
 
I think its a shame people are voting in the poll. Yet they are not introduceing themselves.

79 post
55 replies
 
You are 100% correct. In that era the only ladies employed in animal positions were probably those in a few places such as London Zoo's Children's zoo as 'grooms' for the ponies and to tend the other domestics. Plus Twycross Zoo employed mainly ladies from its earliest stages too.

I noticed the changeover everywhere else gathering pace in the 80/90's period. Now there is a major reversal.

There has been a definite trend in a changing sex ratio of keepers particularly noticable during the 90s in most Western zoos. When I started during the early 90s there were about 4 female keepers out of 40. When I left that particular zoo there were about half female. Fast forward to the last place I worked, only myself and one other were male out of about 8. Almost all students in Animal care courses (a traditional route for potential keepers in this country) tend to be female.

Keepers are poorly paid - not exactly news to anybody. The job entails often heavy physical work, traditionally a male role. For whatever reason either the interest in zoo work from men has decreased or more likely women are deciding that zoowork is an option. I obviously don't have a problem with this, but it does come with inherent problems ie. women cannot physically lift the same weights as men.

Note these changes have not taken place in Asian or African collections.
 
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