d1am0ndback
Well-Known Member
Fossil Rim is public but has private areas which can be viewed on a behind the scenes tour so I would not necessarily consider it a private breeding center.
I was under the impression we were only discussing facilities which were not visible to the public eye regularly and solely exist to breed certain animals, my mistake.Its privately owned. Private does not mean not available to the public to see
Its privately owned. Private does not mean not available to the public to see
Its privately owned. Private does not mean not available to the public to see
Most public zoos are privately owned...
Most zoos in the US are privately owned - accredited zoos are the minority!Very few zoos (accredited) in the US are private.
Private in most cases does not mean public vs nonpublic.
Most zoos in the US are privately owned - accredited zoos are the minority!
Would non-profit charitable entity (aka a private foundation) not be considered privately owned? This is what most AZA zoos are.
~Thylo
Most accredited zoos have a quasi government entity nature. Few unaccredited zoos in the US have any notable breeding..
Absolutely true of the US
Few does not mean zero
Only one of the above is a zoo.. But Ok I never heard of a couple of the above which I will check out. thanks keep the list coming. I have thought of a few more private breeding centers
The International Crane Foundation -which most of us know about
The Peregrine Fund- pretty much single handedly brought back the peregrine falcon in North America, and have been instrumental for the California Condor (they have done the bulk of the
breeding although San Diego and LA zoos have received most of the credit- and rightly so
for the work they have done but the Peregrine Fund seems almost invisible).
How many counts as "few"?
For some other examples:
-Metro Richmond Zoo
-Duke Lemur Center
-Lemur Conservation Foundation
-Lubee Bat Conservancy
-Emerald Forest Bird Gardens
-Livingston Ripley Waterfowl Conservancy
-Cassowary Conservation Fund (the only place in the US breeding cassowaries atm)
-White Oak Conservation
-Micanopy Zoological Preserve
-Center for the Conservation of Tropical Ungulates
-Iron Mountain Ranch
-The dozens of other ungulate breeding facilities across the US
-The dozens of universities which maintain breeding programs for various species
My point is there are many, many, many non-AZA institutions which breed endangered species, and many programs rely on these places for long-term success. The entire Giant Eland program is even run by private individuals with the AZA population being loaned out to them.
~Thylo
The Peregrine Fund- pretty much single handedly brought back the peregrine falcon in North America, and have been instrumental for the California Condor (they have done the bulk of the
breeding although San Diego and LA zoos have received most of the credit- and rightly so
for the work they have done but the Peregrine Fund seems almost invisible).