Having visited the collection this morning, I can address a few points:
my only concern with this set up is will it increase the likelihood of impulse buying with out people realising the animal may be less than charismatic?
In the "zoo" portion of the collection, no impulse buying would be possible as it is laid out just as a dedicated zoo would be, with informational labelling and - the key point - no price labels or any other reference to the animals being available for purchase. As such I would imagine that if one wished to obtain any of the animals in this area you would have to privately contact the collection - which would allow much more scope for prospective buyers being vetted and checked for suitability.
I wonder if they will refund your entrance price if you buy something from them? I would be annoyed if I was seriously considering buying a pet from them and being charged money to go and see it!
As noted, none of the animals in the "zoo" are able to be purchased on the spot from what I observed; the animals in the exotic petshop PetMania which is attached to the collection are the only species able to be purchased on-the-spot. PetMania itself was much like any other exotic petshop focusing on reptiles, amphibians and tropical fish. As one does not have to pay to enter the shop itself, the issue you cite would not arise.
I agree that this combination - a zoo-cum-petshop, if that is what it is, is not really a good idea.
No doubt it will unfortunately encourage some idiots to keep exotic creatures that they do not know how to look after properly.
You may get the impression from my above answers that the news article has given a slightly misleading impression about the collection and how easy it is to buy the animals within the "zoo" - it may be of further comfort to hear that much of the informational signage on the enclosures discusses how *unsuitable* some of the species held within are as pets, and notes the problems that uneducated people obtaining animals they cannot handle can cause.
I'll be writing up my thoughts on the collection proper in a little bit, and attaching a few photographs. For now, I quite liked it. It wasn't earth-shattering but it was more pleasant and better-quality than the newspaper article made it sound.
And I saw my first genet and jerboa
