I saw that "Jaws" is coming out on Blu-ray and it got me wondering about whether zoos and aquariums can have long-term, measurable positive effects on how people understand, appreciate, and contribute to the conservation of species like sharks and gorillas.
"King Kong" is a classic movie, but I think that it probably did a great deal of damage to how people see gorillas. With the modern revolution of zoo exhibits that emphasize the social, mostly gentle, and sometimes human-like family relationships and ecology of gorillas I wonder if anyone has studied whether people who watch gorillas in these exhibits come away with a positive view of these animals that they didn't have before. Does anybody know? I imagine that the work of Dian Fossey and the "Gorillas in the Mist" movie did much good, but zoos have been working to reverse the social image of gorillas continuously for the last several decades.
Ditto sharks, which continue to suffer from the stigma that "Jaws" (great movie that it is) and the endless shark movies that followed it inflicted on their reputation. Have aquarium and zoos had any positive transformative effect on how sharks are seen by the people? I know that Peter Benchley worked hard for the last years of his life to help undo the damage that his novel and the film adaptation did to sharks.
"King Kong" is a classic movie, but I think that it probably did a great deal of damage to how people see gorillas. With the modern revolution of zoo exhibits that emphasize the social, mostly gentle, and sometimes human-like family relationships and ecology of gorillas I wonder if anyone has studied whether people who watch gorillas in these exhibits come away with a positive view of these animals that they didn't have before. Does anybody know? I imagine that the work of Dian Fossey and the "Gorillas in the Mist" movie did much good, but zoos have been working to reverse the social image of gorillas continuously for the last several decades.
Ditto sharks, which continue to suffer from the stigma that "Jaws" (great movie that it is) and the endless shark movies that followed it inflicted on their reputation. Have aquarium and zoos had any positive transformative effect on how sharks are seen by the people? I know that Peter Benchley worked hard for the last years of his life to help undo the damage that his novel and the film adaptation did to sharks.