This topic comes around. How real life zoos decide they need a popular ABC animal and determine what will be the next attraction? I often see new exhibits for supposedly attractive animals where visitors don't stop.
I also noticed that some animals look good on photos, but in real life visitors don't stop that much at their ehxibits, unless the zoos especially builds hype about their exhibit or offers contact sessions. For example white tigers don't seem to attract more visitor attention than regular tigers.Whichever cat is active, visitors watch it. The opposite are animals where visitors will always stop - it seems sealions, a large group of monkeys or a silverback gorilla are like this.
I also noticed that some animals look good on photos, but in real life visitors don't stop that much at their ehxibits, unless the zoos especially builds hype about their exhibit or offers contact sessions. For example white tigers don't seem to attract more visitor attention than regular tigers.Whichever cat is active, visitors watch it. The opposite are animals where visitors will always stop - it seems sealions, a large group of monkeys or a silverback gorilla are like this.