Sounds like you've been brainwashed by the industry.
And it sounds to me like you have been brainwashed by the zoo industry.
Zoos, on the whole do a lousy job at preserving species. The priority of having animals on display works directly against the concept of developing a large sustainable population.
If you
really want to create a back-up population of a wild species, you don't spread that population over an entire country, in single pairs, in noisy urban zoos with different people all looking after them who all have a vast collection of other species to look after and try and breed.
Instead you consolidate that population into a single location, where pairings are flexible and in the case of incompatibility or unexpected death, the situation doesn't leave their healthy mate waiting two years for a substitute to be flown in.
In addition it fosters expertise, since the people caring for the animals are focused more exclusively on this species and not distracted by breeding all the other individual species under their wing. And lastly with so many specimens of a prioritised species, there is no need to place all of them on display. The vast majority of them can be housed in simpler and more peaceful accommodation. Which is more conducive to breeding.
This is what irritates me most about Zoos. Its their absolute biggest fundamental flaw. Virtually none of them specialise. Considering the scope of species they collectively house, we practically never see an individual zoo say "you know what? we're gonna prioritise bongo. We don't want a pair, we want 20 pairs. And we are going to become the experts in Bongo breeding. We are more than happy to share surplus stock with other zoos for display, but don't stress about breeding them - We got Bongo covered. We are the Bongo breeding program HQ. By the way, would anyone like to offer the same for Sable? We have some valuable sable here but we need the space for Bongo - please take our Sable, collect some more and take responsibility for them. In return can you just send us a couple of spare males down the track so we can display them again?"
Obviously all zoos want to house a variety of species, but its the fact that these breeding programs and not centralised between (ideally) two or three zoos that they become nobody's priority.
We actually don't need zoos to have a breeding program for all 200+ species they keep. Just one or two done
properly would suffice. Imagine that. If every Zoo in the United States took responsibility for one otherwise insignificant species. just one.
Thats all they have to worry about.
Thats all they have to import.
Thats all they have to research.
Thats all they have to support a in-situ conservation project for.
just one species.
They still have a collection of other species. To the visitor the zoo is much like it has always been, diverse and interesting. To the Zoo managers/keepers its even easier. They keep one jaguar in enclosure suitable for one jaguar and when he dies, there will be no problems getting another because the breeding programs in either (hypothetical) San Antonio or Houston between them have 100 jaguars and always have a surplus animal or two they are happy to retire out to another zoo. Its the same with their de-sexed lions that come from San Diego and the elderly tapir pair that come from North Carolina. But this specific zoo just has to worry about Bongo thats their bit for the species that keeps the whole AZA stocked.
This is not me praising hunting ranches. This is just me Arguing the number one reason why I believe Zoos are not so great at preserving species as they make out they are.
Now i will address these ranches. You said -
They don't contribute to conservation and preservation of the species.
Actually they do contribute to the
preservation of the species. At least in captivity. Even some Texas ranch that is totally for profit and offers not a cent to conservation in the wild will still be of benefit, simply by the fact that they maintain a herd. I dare say, their herd will likely be much larger than those of 90% of zoos. And when their breeding male dies, they are much more likely to have a replacement instantly on hand to replace him.
They breed them to shoot them.
You didn't think this through did you? If the ranch shot all their animals they would have none to continue to breed from. What ranches do is breed intensively and allow the surplus (often males, depending on the species) to be shot. Particularly in the case of ungulates, but its true of many species, males tend to be surplus. This is because so many species live in male-dominant polygamous societies. Kinda convenient since males are the trophies hunters usually desire. but this is not the point.
Zoos breeding programs on the other hand often become deadlocked with surplus animals and have to halt breeding. See in the wild all these surplus males and older animals would have been picked off by lions by now. But in zoos, with all the vet care, protection and food they desire they live twice as long as their wild counterparts.
In fact to get around this many Zoos actually shoot their surplus hoofstock to be able to free up space to resume breeding. I wonder if before they do this they let them loose in the wild? you know, just to be fair. To give them a good sporting chance?
Its also worth noting that the majority of species housed in virtually all Zoos are not personally supported by that zoo in an in-situ conservation program. Zoos may financially support conservation programs for a few of the species they keep, but for the rest they only off what the ranch does - preservation of the species in captivity.
So philosophies and reasons for being aside, in terms of what they are practically doing for the species, is there
that much difference?
who's got more addax? Zoos or ranches?
The one Hunting ranch here in Australia is probably the saving grace for captive nilgai here. The Zoos certainly didn't manage to preserve them.
And whilst I personally don't like seeing a rare species get shot - I actually have more faith in the person with financial incentive to not let his animals die out than a zoo. As we all know and frequently complain about - Zoos let their animals die out
all the time.
So that just leaves the ethical side of it. Is canned hunting wrong? Is culling wrong?
Personally, I eat meat so I am wise enough to not be so hypocritical as to condemn those who kill their own.