yes things are good
firstly ill say that more work could be done to more effectively manage species, but considering our quarantine laws and small number of zoos i think that ARAZPA's regionally managed programs are evelving fast and in many ways we are leading the international zoo industry. i mean, we had model ssp or studbooks decades before america, just out of neccesity, to manage our small zoo stock of species like hippo, giraffe and cassowary.
if you look back in time, particularly the last 15 years, our regional breeding programs have really started to work.
theres been some failures along the way , and grandicose plans for species like bongo, malayan tapir and golden lion tamarin, who all may fall by the wayside. unfortunate events or unexpected deaths may have jeapordised the viabilty of programs, again underscoring the importance of having more individuals of fewer species. think of the death of congo, our only bull african elephant, or the male pygmy hippo from hawaii who died at taronga because of a disease transmitted by rats.
there were big plans for maned wolves and asian lions, until ARAZPA and ZPB of NSW saw the sense in cooperating on just one species. weve seen species like peccary and sitatunga slip towards regional extinction, and the future of others like agouti may lie in preserving a closely inbred population. weve seen what a lack of regional coordination can result in, with once viable number sof capybarra and cavy crashing suddenly because of decisions to castrate and short generation times which leave no time to right the wrongs and get a population back on track.
weve seen quarantine laws relaxed and tightened. we continue to watch as hybrid orangs are phased out. we watch and see if mouse deer will turn up, or spotted deer from the phillipines. taronga has decided to go it alone with indian rhinos, mogo with white lions and seaworld with polar bears. all species must be managed as international programs, and whilst they hold high advocacy and education values it is perhaps the commercial imperatives associated with such high -profile species which sees zoos turning their backs on what we now know we need, well managed, cooperative programs.
having said all that, i feel that us zoo visitors have an exciting future ahead of us. our zoos will have great collections of great apes, big cats, elephants, gibbons and many lesser primates. red pandas, giraffes and meerkats. fewer species equals better exhibits and more room. and rather than looking at near identical collections at sydney, melbourne, perth and adelaide as monotonous, us zoogoers who are really interested will have the joy of comparing and contrasting exhibits in the same way as we do with melbourne and sydney for gorillas, elephants and orangs.
good on ARAZPA for the role they are playing, and lets hope stuped mistakes continue to be eliminated and zoos work even more closely together.