I think, this thread is not the right place to discuss if moose and musk ox can be kept in Zoos,( most zoo interested people won't understand it anyway,so I tell you by PM.
I would like to know why, I'm sure lots of other people are interested too.
I think, this thread is not the right place to discuss if moose and musk ox can be kept in Zoos,( most zoo interested people won't understand it anyway,so I tell you by PM.
most zoo interested people won't understand it anyway![]()
Love Zoo Berlins Lion House..a quite fantastic place - wouldn't mind living there myself!
All that you say is true TLD,but you are missing a major reason why he does that,its because he can,but also you have to remember that our infamous friend is also a highly respected German Zoo Keeper,and has his reputation to protect!!!!By the by, deleting or editing your comments after people disagree with them isn't exactly in the spirit of fair discussion, Bibafter all, there are a number of people debating the ABH in this thread and in some cases suggesting that my opinion of the house is too lenient, but I haven't deleted my opinion or edited it retrospectively!
By the by, deleting or editing your comments after people disagree with them isn't exactly in the spirit of fair discussion, Bibafter all, there are a number of people debating the ABH in this thread and in some cases suggesting that my opinion of the house is too lenient, but I haven't deleted my opinion or edited it retrospectively!
The point being that someone found the ABH to be so horrific that he/she couldn't even bear to enter-plainly a ridiculous standpoint..its like saying (as I said) that parts of Birmingham are so horrible that I couldn't even drive through them! And my point about Chinatown was that it is MANHATTAN...NEW YORK!,that even around the corner in civilized societies there are animal abuses on a significant scale - to compare the Brehm House with them is ridiculous,almost anti-zoo in fact.
Everyone in this thread has agreed that the ABH needs to change.
I mean we could go on and on with "tit for tat" couldn't we? The point being that someone found the ABH to be so horrific that he/she couldn't even bear to enter-plainly a ridiculous standpoint..its like saying (as I said) that parts of Birmingham are so horrible that I couldn't even drive through them! And my point about Chinatown was that it is MANHATTAN...NEW YORK!,that even around the corner in civilized societies there are animal abuses on a significant scale - to compare the Brehm House with them is ridiculous,almost anti-zoo in fact.
Bib..you clearly have an issue with Tierpark and I haven't the time to go on and on..but take the Moose , there is little that is different about their management in a meadow with a lot of trees or no trees provided they have a pool,or perhaps you have an issue with Whipsnade and the Highland Wildlife Park too ? Diet seems to be key to this species(in fact it is).
I have stayed out of the discussion following my posts, partly because I had said my piece but mostly because I am not as experienced as most of the members here, and I think listening and learning is usually the best policy in my situation. However, I do feel inclined to defend chizlit on this point, particularly as they have said that their views on the ABH had not previously been well received. This is a moral support post.
I don't think it's fair or helpful to discredit someone's emotional response to an exhibit, especially in this case. Absolutely one can debate and disagree with what someone thinks about an enclosure; that's one of the fun things to do on zoochat. But to attack so abruptly how it makes them feel does not achieve anything positive.
I can't speak for chizlit but I can paraphrase the views of many on this site that I have read over the past months: exhibits with bad animal welfare make us feel sick and/or sad. That's not an intellectual position, that's a gut response to seeing an animal in poor conditions. Everyone has different ideas and standards and thus everyone has different triggers and response levels. Just because you can't imagine being so horrified in a zoo doesn't mean others shouldn't. That doesn't make them anti-zoo, it just makes them different to you. Which is absolutely fine.
Sometimes an emotional response could be due to a lack of understanding. Then it's perfectly reasonable to explain why the way someone feels is unfounded. But that's not what's happening here. Everyone in this thread has agreed that the ABH needs to change. Some just feel it more strongly than others.
It seems the debate on ABH has two sides, those who wish to see many cats crammed into (and outside) a beautiful old historic which is no longer fit for modern animal keeping needs, or those who look with human eyes and see that the place is too small for the amount of animals that it contains.
I will say this straight away, though; despite the fact these enclosures could be so much better were they to be given a little care and attention (something which I fear may not be happening in the near future considering the current state of upheaval with the accession of Dr Andreas Knieriem) I still feel that they stand up rather well when compared to so many of the enclosures I am familiar with over here in the UK.
Something which struck me about these enclosures is that they could easily be improved by merging two sets of the enclosures together - it seems to me that although it is nice to be able to display a non-subspecific and melanistic leopard, if the Tierpark got rid of this animal they could potentially merge this enclosure with either that of the Sumatran Tiger on one side, or the Javan Leopard on the other. Similarly, having two enclosures side-by-side for a melanistic Jaguar and a pair of spotted Jaguar is fine enough if you have larger enclosures, but in this situation is arguably less important than potentially merging the two enclosures and giving the breeding pair more space.
However my pleasure was tempered, as I knew it would be, by the fact that the indoor enclosures for the carnivores I had seen on my tour of the exterior of the building were indeed insufficent for the purpose. Nowhere near as bad as the indoor enclosures at - for instance - South Lakes Wild Animal Park but nowhere near as good as they could and should have been. Although it will put the inside corridors of the ABH out of commission once again, I do hope that the long-delayed interior work on the cat enclosures goes ahead despite the change in management.
We then reached the indoor enclosure for the Malayan Tiger (Panthera tigris jacksoni), which I rather liked; it was several orders of magnitude bigger than any indoor tiger enclosure I had ever seen in the past, and provided both climbing and swimming opportunities for the inhabitants. I have a sneaking suspicion that were this enclosure to be in any other collection, and not the Alfred-Brehm Haus, it would be much lauded as a world class exhibit - but as it is, it will be stymied by the low quality of most of the other indoor enclosures in the ABH.
These enclosures were all rather similar in design and quality to the indoor tiger enclosure, but I must admit that I found myself thinking that if Tierpark went out of the Asiatic Lions they could either use the enclosures for pure African animals, or as housing for their new Sumatran Tigers, which represent a sorely-needed boost to the European genepool for the subspecies.
I'd argue that you have constructed a false - and rather loaded - dichotomy; reducing those who like the ABH to people who "wish to see many cats crammed into [a building] which is no longer fit for modern animal keeping needs" and stating that those who dislike it are the only ones who "look with human eyes and see that the place is too small for the amount of animals that it contains".
This dichotomy does not allow for the possibility that there are people who overall enjoy the ABH but recognise it could and should be improved to bring it "up to date" - but who believe this can be done without losing the overall feel of the building as a whole; something which they may fear will happen with the planned changes under the new management.
If you look back to my posts about the ABH, I would like to think you would concede that I belong to this third category. For instance:
Discussing the small carnivore and clouded leopard external enclosures to the right of the ABH:
Discussing the external enclosures for big cats along the left-hand perimeter of the ABH:
Discussing the internal enclosures for big cats in the ABH:
Discussing the internal enclosure for Malayan Tiger in the ABH:
Discussing the Asiatic Lion enclosures, and changes I would make regarding them:
At the end of the day whatever people may fear they might lose should not really count as highly as animal welfare imo.
Naturallymy view is, however, that it need not be an either/or situation; I think that it is entirely possible to retain the historic feel and environment of a given exhibit and still increase animal welfare. It is a shame that some people do believe that the former can never co-exist with the latter..... I suppose only time will tell whether this will prove to be the case for the ABH.
Anyhow, much as I very much want my trip reports to provoke discussion and debate I'd prefer things to be a little less antagonisticquite apart from anything else, if things get *too* heated future readers of this thread might well elect not to continue reading to the conclusion of my trip reports!
Status update on those, incidentally, is that my dad is still working on his dissertation but I have been using the time to get as many handwritten notes for both this thread and the "Bavaria" thread done. Unless the translation of notes to keyboard leads to unplanned expansion I only anticipate a few more Leipzig posts, then maybe 2 or 3 posts for my second day at Tierpark Berlin, then a single post on the Humboldt Museum and a final concluding post. Then I plan to do an "index" post with hyperlinks to *all* trip posts, so that anyone reading the thread subsequently can easily find a given post.
After that, Bavaria!
I would recommend you to come to Switzerland soon, because even when Gondwanaland is the largest and youngest of the 3 large rainforest domes in Europe, I find it also the least good of the 3. Imo it can barely stand in the shadow of the Masoala hall in Zurich, which is a good contender for the best zoo exhibit in Europe.