Firstly let me say I am not here to answer for the Australian exotic zoo industry, in which I have zero involvement, minuscule influence, and little interest. I did care once but I find that as you get older you have trim back what you care about or you risk not being able to affect change in areas that really matter to you. I do have an interest in what zoos can do for conservation and from that perspective I am happy to comment.
Which it is why it is important that zoos focus on species where they can make a difference, and not use conservation as green wash to cover keeping just any species they fancy at the moment. Conservation breeding is an expensive and complex process.Thank you for pointing out the obvious, yes there are thousands of species which are endangered with no one suggesting all can be saved,
Not brushed over, just ignored. I have no idea why these two species have been dropped. It could be husbandry issues, maybe snow leopards are not partial to our climates and maybe our city zoos realized they do not have the room the denning enclosures female sun bears require. Or maybe the zoos decided they would not be getting the conservation or commercial outcomes they expected.but you seem to brush passed the point of the two species that I had mentioned, the Snow Leopard and the Sun Bear both of these animals species were chosen by the regional zoos as the species of interest above others for the regions zoos, My point of which you seem to just brush passed is there appears to be little to no long term commitment for them. If these are what the zoos want thats fine but then one stands by them long term and here lies the problem.
Indeed you are right, and that is the reason the species pretty much disappeared at the time. The main zoos had agreed to drop the Americas and concentrate on Asia and to a lesser extent Africa. However the zoo scene has changed significantly since then, with many more exotics in private zoos. The maned wolf is an excellent species for small zoos being noticeable and exotic looking, while at the same time not being expensive to look after and not being too dangerous.And again no one is suggesting that if someone like Melbourne zoo drop Maned wolfs the public will stop coming its obvious one or two zoos cant carry all the needed animals of the said species alone, they need to be in a number of zoos working on a breeding program as you very well know.
You assume I actually care if there are zebras in Australian zoos or not, which I don't. I do think that zebras are an extraordinarily popular ABC exhibit and major zoo managers would be stupid if they did let them go extinct in zoos. For that reason I am sure they will make commercial decisions to ensure that they do not loose zebras from their zoos, what they do is up to them. As for the two regional zoos importing zebras, obviously they have also made a commercial decision and I hope it has worked for them.The other point which you brush passed as I have mentioned before is management of that said species like as mentioned with the Zebra, while many zoos within our region hold them they are quite inbred, which is something the major zoos should have addressed long ago but did not, No new bloodlines have been imported for many years by any of the major zoos that I know of so in my view they could have and should have done better than this?, As many would be aware it took two small regional zoos to import from the USA ten Zebra only a few years ago at great cost with the biggest import of Zebra in modern times if I am correct, So in my view if two small zoos can do this why has it not been done by the major zoos here?, why let them become so badly inbred?, Do you not agree they could have done better?.![]()