Agree that "hate" is too strong a word. I don't like to see meerkats (no conservation value); short-clawed otters (ditto); Burmese pythons (too common); Bennett's wallabies (zoos should be more original and inaginative and choose one of the much rarer wallaby species); European eagle owls (too common); capybara (no conservation value); crested porcupine (no conservation value); "pet-shop-type" tropical fish (e.g. mollies, guppies, platies, swordtails); "pet-shop-type" birds (e.g. budgerigars, cockatiels, zebra finches, but I don't mind the true wild variety of these birds); "pet-shop-type" reptiles, e.g. bearded dragons, green iguanas, leopard geckos, corn snakes, etc. (but in the Education Centre, I think it's fine to keep these species as they can be used for demonstrations, just not using up space in the reptile house); cetaceans of any kind (what is basically a large swimming pool can never be a replication of the North Atlantic); white tigers (using up valuable space that could be put to better use for an endangered tiger subspecies); albinos and mutation colours of any species; large birds of prey such as condors or large eagles (but I make an exceptiion if the species is on the verge of extinctioon andf holding it in captivity may be ther last ditch effort to save it, e.g. Californian condor); domestic species of any kind including reindeer (leave those to the many farm parks and rare breed centres ); pinioned waterfowl (a practice fortunately dying out now); and Bactrian camels (always the domestic species). Zoos often mislead the public by saying Bactrian camels are highly endangered, but fail to make any distinction between the domestic and the endangered wild camel. I would love to see wild Bactrian camels making an appearance in our zoos, as there is a conservation imperative there.