And to be honest : culling is used sometimes in french zoos but never revelled as too outrageous for the general public.
Who says it is easy for people in Scandinavia to kill animals?
it's never easy, and never has been.
After the giraffe marius was killed, people may have thought we were indifferent, which does not fit at all.
We do care a lot about animal welfare and that animals are treated properly.
We are not barbarians![]()
No apologies necessary. I agree it’s sad when animals are euthanised due to a lack of planning; but support decisions such as Auckland’s to euthanise their two elderly lions together (when one needed to be euthanised on medical grounds), as to not do so would lead to suffering from a welfare perspective (being social animals).
My solution would be redesigning group exhibits with more internal sight barriers, to reduce tension and allow juvenile males to stay longer in the natal group, reducing the time when they are alone. Grass lawns with few wooden frames should go. Second, rebuilding exhibits to keep males next to breeding groups (possibly their natal ones), allowing both interaction through the gates and withdrawing. This would model the real social structure of gorillas, where bachelor males regularly interact with groups. Third, keep more bachelor groups, and redesign them to be able to keep several males in separate sub-exhibits with voluntary visual contact. Maybe old and influential zoos which insist on keeping gorillas, but have objectively small exhibits stitched from several even smaller old rooms, should switch to bachelor groups, and give breeding groups to larger exhibits? Fourth, rotate males in groups more often, even at the cost of stopping breeding and disturbance to females. This would mimic the natural response of gorilla population to high population size, where social tension rises and breeding slows.
Second, both from the view of science and view of welfare, no sex or age class is less desirable than another. Young males are as worthy as old females and any others. Word 'surplus' males belongs to livestock husbandry, where the goal is maximizing production of young. But gorilla EEP no longer needs to maximize breeding.
Holding space in Europe is finite and with growing space demand per individual, it might decrease in future. If 1/3 of available capacity of a harem-living species is blocked by males that are not needed for breeding at all (and would be probably already dead in the wildness), it decreases effective size of the population. This is negative.
Actually zoos were looking to breed them at the time, and there was huge kudos for any zoo that did. They just had no idea that a correctly balanced social group was required. They thought a couple, just like humans, would be fine. I remember lack of breeding being blamed on "incompatibility", films of gorillas mating being shown as after hours entertainment to get them in the mood, and of course AI. Once gorillas started to be kept in correctly structured social groups, breeding flourished. There is a lesson here - animals will breed successfully so long as we provide them with the conditions they need, not what we assume is best. Failure to breed a species successfully in captivity is our fault not theirs.50 years ago zoos had the opposite fashion - they preferred just 2 or 3 individuals for display. Big breeding groups were seen as lack of financial prudence - cost more but don't bring proportionally more visitors.
Aren't I correct in thinking at one stage around the 1990's, Taronga did say they would cease gorilla breeding until some form of sex selection became scientifically possible. But then they didn't adhere to this and have had further (regulated) births since- which have unfortunately continued to have a male bias?That’s a good point. I was only thinking the other day of an article I found from Taronga’s history about one of their gorillas. In 1999, Frala was pregnant with her fifth infant which testing had identified was a female. The zoo denied the infant would have been aborted if it were male - and indeed welcomed 4.2 infants into their troop in the 2000’s proving that wasn’t their management practice; but 22 years on, perhaps this could be implemented more in zoos?
Actually zoos were looking to breed them at the time, and there was huge kudos for any zoo that did. They just had no idea that a correctly balanced social group was required. They thought a couple, just like humans, would be fine. I remember lack of breeding being blamed on "incompatibility", films of gorillas mating being shown as after hours entertainment to get them in the mood, and of course AI. Once gorillas started to be kept in correctly structured social groups, breeding flourished.
Could moderators please change the thread title? EAZA never proposed to cull gorillas. And it is better not to encourage clickbait / sensationalist titles.
In the meantime, EAZA itself has responded with a statement.
https://www.eaza.net/assets/Uploads/2021-11-24-Press-statement-gorillas4.pdf
Aren't I correct in thinking at one stage around the 1990's, Taronga did say they would cease gorilla breeding until some form of sex selection became scientifically possible. But then they didn't adhere to this and have had further (regulated) births since- which have unfortunately continued to have a male bias?
That’s news to me, but might explain the pause they had in breeding.
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