I have recently noticed that many zoos do not many keep foreign small rodents or insectivorous mammals (except squirrels and dormice).
By small rodents and insectivorous mammals, I mean animals such as rats, hedgehogs, shrews, mice, squirrels and dormice (no armadillos, pangolins, beavers, rats, capybara, patagonian cavies etc.).
I have never seen an animal such as a harvest mouse outside of a zoo in Europe, but then what is the point in breeding (they are relatively common) them or displaying (they only live 3-5 years) them in North America for example?
Personally, I believe rare and really exotic (acacia rats, flying, prevost and palm squirrels, long eared hedgehogs for example are what I consider to be really exotic) small rodents and insectivorous mammals should be kept in foreign zoos.
By small rodents and insectivorous mammals, I mean animals such as rats, hedgehogs, shrews, mice, squirrels and dormice (no armadillos, pangolins, beavers, rats, capybara, patagonian cavies etc.).
I have never seen an animal such as a harvest mouse outside of a zoo in Europe, but then what is the point in breeding (they are relatively common) them or displaying (they only live 3-5 years) them in North America for example?
Personally, I believe rare and really exotic (acacia rats, flying, prevost and palm squirrels, long eared hedgehogs for example are what I consider to be really exotic) small rodents and insectivorous mammals should be kept in foreign zoos.