Rookeyper,
I was not saying we should not consider public safety. I am just saying that given the current technological advances and efficient/adequate safety procedures in zoos, we should and need to look at a different courses of action.
I have in-depth personal experience of game capture, tranquilisation et al under varying conditions and circumstances - even where stress has made dosing game more or less inadequate - yet I have never encountered a situation where we were not able to handle individual animals .... by hand or by the blowpipe / or gas-powered rifle. In all these instances a fully experienced vet with long history in wildlife game capture was present and oversaw all proceedings.
I am not saying we have never lost any game in our care ...! We have and ... it aint pretty and cuts you down to the bone! I am just saying we should be more diligent in dealing with escapees in an enclosed environment, be they inside zoos or outside and out of control. Euthanasia or mercy killing should only be a last resort. I feel far too quickly authorities opt for the easy cop way out. Hence, to me on and off site zoo personnel should be in the driving seat and should be the only decision makers and the executioners ... if it has to come to that at all.
If you look at the Monarto rhino case in greater detail ... you will find that the animal walked back to his enclosure of its own accord with some coaxing by zoo/ animal management personnel.
If this decision had been entirely the police's alone ..., we would now have been looking at a stone dead genetically valuable rhino male
! What a comforting thought that would be for everyone involved!
I was not saying we should not consider public safety. I am just saying that given the current technological advances and efficient/adequate safety procedures in zoos, we should and need to look at a different courses of action.
I have in-depth personal experience of game capture, tranquilisation et al under varying conditions and circumstances - even where stress has made dosing game more or less inadequate - yet I have never encountered a situation where we were not able to handle individual animals .... by hand or by the blowpipe / or gas-powered rifle. In all these instances a fully experienced vet with long history in wildlife game capture was present and oversaw all proceedings.
I am not saying we have never lost any game in our care ...! We have and ... it aint pretty and cuts you down to the bone! I am just saying we should be more diligent in dealing with escapees in an enclosed environment, be they inside zoos or outside and out of control. Euthanasia or mercy killing should only be a last resort. I feel far too quickly authorities opt for the easy cop way out. Hence, to me on and off site zoo personnel should be in the driving seat and should be the only decision makers and the executioners ... if it has to come to that at all.
If you look at the Monarto rhino case in greater detail ... you will find that the animal walked back to his enclosure of its own accord with some coaxing by zoo/ animal management personnel.
If this decision had been entirely the police's alone ..., we would now have been looking at a stone dead genetically valuable rhino male