I think that the behavior of children (and even older people in zoos) is enigmatic of a much bigger problem of how people are generally educated on zoos.
I read a lot of reviews for the Bronx Zoo last night and there were several reviews complaining about how lions, elephants and rhinos cannot be seen in winter (we're a land partial to large sums of snow--especially this winter). When another poster pointed this out, several posts afterwords
complained that
they shouldn't have to miss their favorite zoo animals just because it's snowing. Yes, some zoos have indoor exhibits for such animals but to insinuate that the zoo bringing a lion indoors when it snows is somehow offensive to visitors is absurd. Then again, I've also read Internet reviews that were plain upset because the movie
Madagascar by Disney showed animals that were not actually in the Central Park Zoo and that this was highly misleading for the zoo to do. Clearly, people incapable of Google-ing a website before going to the zoo to see a talking zebra are not the ones at fault
Or just today, I went to the zoo and there was this nice couple (20-30's) waiting at the gate with me. When I was looking at the grizzly bear (who was actually out--he never really is), the man came barreling down the hill, climbed
over the decorative barrier, began leaning over the wall of the exhibit and screaming on the top of his lungs for the bear to look his way. When the bear (I'm assuming aggravated at the noise or just in the mood for it...) decided to climb the to the of the exhibit [where he could not been seen anymore...] the man threw his lens cap at the bear (which clearly missed and still landed in the bushes on the visitor side of the moat).
On a [somewhat] bright note, there was a college ecology class at the zoo today too monitoring animals (something to do with timing some behavior or the like...) and they were genuinely quiet the whole time except when the professor would say time and they'd move on. The biggest inconvenience the group brought was that for certain exhibits there were four or five people monitoring a single exhibit so it was harder to see for the time they were there.