Once you go to your home zoo (or other zoos) enough times, you start to get to know the animals names. I have always wondered if it's generally excepted as ok to call animals by their names when you visit.
Once you go to your home zoo (or other zoos) enough times, you start to get to know the animals names. I have always wondered if it's generally excepted as ok to call animals by their names when you visit.
Many animals become desensitised to their names through repetition and tune out the visitors as white noise. In some cases, the animal’s names are little more than a tool of engagement with the public.
Some zoos give their animals a house name and a media name. This is vital for great apes and elephants, who keepers need to be able to instruct via training sessions without the public shouting commands or desensitising them to their name.
I’ll confess to bellowing the name of Hamilton Zoo’s alpha male chimpanzee when I was younger out of curiosity to see if he’d look up. He acted as if he’d heard it all before. As an adult I’m more mindful of the reasons why the public shouldn’t confuse the animal’s training etc.![]()
Once you go to your home zoo (or other zoos) enough times, you start to get to know the animals names. I have always wondered if it's generally excepted as ok to call animals by their names when you visit.
Many animals become desensitised to their names through repetition and tune out the visitors as white noise. In some cases, the animal’s names are little more than a tool of engagement with the public.
Some zoos give their animals a house name and a media name. This is vital for great apes and elephants, who keepers need to be able to instruct via training sessions without the public shouting commands or desensitising them to their name.
I’ll confess to bellowing the name of Hamilton Zoo’s alpha male chimpanzee when I was younger out of curiosity to see if he’d look up. He acted as if he’d heard it all before. As an adult I’m more mindful of the reasons why the public shouldn’t confuse the animal’s training etc.![]()
I was waiting for the chimpanzee talk to start at Wellington Zoo and one of the females saw the apple I was eating. She outstretched her hand expectantly, hoping I’d throw it to her. My son got a similar response while eating a banana at Hamilton Zoo.
Its been my experience watching them over many years, that despite the rigid 'no feeding' rules for the public at virtually all zoos nowadays, many Great Apes will still immediately use the time-honoured outstretched hand as
begging behaviour, if there is any chance it looks like a visitor might offer them something. Probably passed through the generations even if its not successful a lot of the time.