Oh I didn't know that before
Swapping the cubs between mother and hand-rearing is a proven method that enables zoo staff to best care for twins in the event that the mother cannot manage two cubs, which was the case with Mei Xiang. When swapping the cubs became difficult.....
A Sea Lion's First Date At Smithsonian's National Zoo
It’s hard to believe that the slippery 220 pound animal is considered petite. In the concrete hallway where he stands, the only thing that seems petite about him are his ears, which are so impossibly small it’s shocking he can actually hear anything out of them. But from the way he waddles over to animal keepers and responds to their commands, it is clear he is listening. This is important, because today Jetty needs to be on his best behavior: for the first time, he’s exploring his new home: an exhibit at the National Zoo.
Jetty is a sea lion that was born in the wild but has spent most of his life in captivity. He waits patiently as animal keepers slide back a heavy wooden door, beyond which is the exhibit pool. Without hesitating, Jetty plunges into these new waters.
Animal keeper Chelsea Grubb says Jetty is here for a very specific job. Grubb hopes that she will be able to, “see the results [of the job] next year.”
https://wamu.org/programs/metro_con...lions_first_date_at_smithsonians_national_zoo
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Jetty, a male sea lion, pauses on the threshhold of the water at the exhibit at the Smithsonian National Zoo
What the ‘Save the Pandas’ campaign reveals
Falling attendance at the National Zoo is behind the hype
For years, the National Zoo has come under fire, including in a blistering 2013 Congressional report over gross negligence, a scathing 2004 National Academy of Sciences report into animal deaths at the zoo and, somewhere in between, an investigation revealing that the zoo had disposed of some wild animals by sending them to a canned hunting outfit and to a petting zoo. Judging by the zoo’s current stage-managed “pandamonium,” its practices still need to be examined closely and the hype seen for what it is.
From the moment of the first panda birth, the newborns were handled as if they were trinkets — picked up and turned this way and that under the camera lights, which is inarguably harmful and certainly not beneficial to them. Showing them off to the cameras over and over again is done to bolster interest in the zoo and thus attendance.
INGRID NEWKIRK: Falling zoo attendance behind panda hype - Washington Times
Don't know if this is a trust able source because I haven't heard of them before but I thought I would post it.
It was written by the head of PETA so that means it is all wrong
The article is ridiculous hyperbole and a shameful piece of propaganda from PETA. It would be best if we all disregarded it immediately.
Sorry for posting it. Even though it's now been two years since I joined i'm still a nub on here.
Don't apologise for posting it. Nobody here should be afraid of engaging with critical voices, no matter how moronic they are.