Top 5 Zoos in the USA

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This thread is certainly generating a lot of discussion! (I confess I have read the beginning pages and end page but not most of the middle). Here are some random thoughts (and yes I have been to both Bronx and San Diego and a hundred other zoos).

Conservation in my opinion is the only justification for a modern zoo (though I might make an exception for rescue shelters). It should be given the most weight in any ranking of zoos. It is not the entire weight - animal care and exhibit design are vitally important as well. But any ranking that does not consider conservation is a ranking I would pay no attention to. Coincidentally I just came back from a zoo visit and lunch with a ZooChatter who moved to my city this week and he agrees that conservation is the most important thing (even though he and I disagree on some other aspects of zoos).

As I said at the beginning, I believe San Diego is the best overall zoo even though it is not my personal favorite. Someone earlier made a good distinction between personal favorite and best. However Bronx is also excellent, based on what little I remember from my visit in 2001. It would be interesting to go back now and see how they compare. I do remember (based on a summer visit) that Bronx's gorilla complex was the best I had seen.

This thread contains some borderline personal attacks, which is one of the things I track as a moderator (as do my fellow moderators). Please remember to keep it civil, as any posts that are deemed inappropriate are subject to being edited or deleted.
 
Tense exchanges aside, I think this thread has shown just how much diversity of thought and philosophy exists among the people on this site, who are already a minority of zoo visitors. Some people think first about visitor experience when considering what zoo is the "best", while others consider conservation their primary concern, while others still care foremost about animal welfare. All around a great showing of how many different backgrounds and opinions are represented on just this thread, let alone on ZooChat itself.

In terms of @ANyhuis's statistical analysis: when I first read it, I had some of the same concerns that @lintworm pointed out, mainly about the very small sample size and weight inequality between categories. I do, however, think that we should give @ANyhuis a chance to address these concerns and explain more about his methods; I for one would be very grateful to have that opportunity, as statistics is very important in my studies and research and I'm always looking to have a better grasp of it.

I'd like to largely stay out of the personal conflicts, but as someone who has read every post in this thread I would like to point out that @ThylacineAlive has been very clear multiple times about his intentions for this thread and about how they are not trying to prove Bronx's superiority. I have read all of his posts, and I fully agree with the self-assessment.
 
My good friend SnowLeopard described, a week or so ago, the method that we (along with my coauthor Jon Wassner) used to statistically compare the Top 5 zoos (see above). As a Master's Degree level statistician, with over 35 years experience as a statistician, I strongly stand by our analysis! It was done the way many things in society are compared and evaluated, and by combining our ratings from many different aspects of the zoos, our analysis method took a lot of the subjectivity out of the analysis and our conclusions could validly be considered mostly objective. I would challenge anyone reading this to show me a better way of comparing and rating zoos.

I would respectfully challenge your assertion that this exercise is meaningful for ranking zoos. Statistical analysis is only as good as the data input into it. Your data is all subjective opinion. You are asserting that your opinions are superior to those of others because you have attached numbers to them, but this is not intellectually honest, as it only reflects your opinions. The statistical analysis confirms your opinions because it is all based on your opinions, as it would be of anyone's opinions that you feed into your model.
 
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As a holder of a science degree I believe that any actual scientist or statistician would hold critique until the actual study is seen and analyzed. I suggest you do too. There are flaws with all studies but bashing a summary of one because it didn’t do everything right and it doesn’t come to the same conclusions individual members of this forum have come to, doesn't make it a bad study.

Sure there are multiple points that can't be assessed based on the summary. But the summary gives enough of the theoretical background to know that a) the sample size was 3, which is an awful small number to base any conclusions of superiority on and b) basically everything @DavidBrown said in the post above.

I would love to know more about the details of the study (such as use or non-use of standard errors) to see whether the study has done as good as it could have been within the limitations.

But saying you have a Masters degree in statistics, so the analysis must be sound, is just an Argument from Authority.
 
OK, a lot for me to answer about my (our) statistical analysis, comparing the 5 top zoos in the USA. I'll try to do so in one posting, but I warn you, this may be long!

I think that the ranking was significantly flawed for various reasons and the whole ranking reaks of pseudoscience on a level that would make Sheridan jealous.
Yikes, I'm being compared to Anthony Sheridan. As unpopular as he is among some of you, that makes me nervous. But I'll stop and say I have respect for Sheridan and have enjoyed his books. While I would do the ratings differently, his ratings are not bad. The one big difference between his ratings and ours is that what we did was only for fun between the 3 of us. You will not see our ratings in a book, and frankly, I even hesitated to let SnowLeopard bring them up here, knowing the controversy they would ignite. But lintworm, our ratings system is not pseudoscience. I'm sorry if I sound like I'm bragging about my credentials, but I do know what I'm talking about when using statistics.

From a statistical point of view a sample size of three is extremely limited and even taxonomists will have problems accepting such an analysis. Additionally it would be very interesting to see how the 3 sampling points differed in their ranking of all categories and what would thus be the standard error of all scores.
Valid criticism, though once again, we were doing this for fun. But then again, it's not exactly true that our sample size was n=3. Each of us did 28 ratings, so it could be said that n=3*28= 84, though that introduces a high amount of inter-rater correlation. On top of that, the 3 of us have all been to hundreds of zoos worldwide, with SL and me having been to 300-400, so we have a lot of experience evaluating zoos. If you knew the 3 of us, you'd know that we have 3 very different viewpoints in looking at and rating zoos.

But to address this small sample size, if anyone out there would like to join us and have your ratings added to ours, let me know and I'll send you a ballot. The only requirements are that you have to have been to all 5 (San Diego, Omaha, St.Louis, Columbus, Bronx) of the zoos (within the past 10 years), and you have to pledge that your ratings will honest and not aimed to help or hurt any of the zoos.

Additionally did each zoonerd rank independently or did you come up with an average by ways of discussion, the first would be much preferable
We definitely did our ratings completely independently. But we did reserve the right to change a rating or two when we saw very different numbers from the other 2. This resulted when we might have forgotten a key new animal or key new exhibit that's been added perhaps since our last visit to the zoo. In such a situation, yes, we might have modified our ratings with more information.

I would respectfully challenge your assertion that this exercise is meaningful for ranking zoos. Statistical analysis is only as good as the data input into it. Your data is all subjective opinion. You are asserting that your opinions are superior to those of others because you have attached numbers to them, but this is not intellectually honest, as it only reflects your opinions. The statistical analysis confirms your opinions because it is all based on your opinions, as it would be of anyone's opinions that you feed into your model.
While you are correct that our ratings were subjective, one principle of ranking statistics is that if you accumulate enough of them, they become both more objective and more normally distributed. And we are NOT asserting that our opinions are superior to anyone else's, only that we did this analysis WITHOUT aiming for a particular result. We were open to whatever the final numbers would tell us.

The main problem is however on how you decide how to give a grade for each individual category (and how you minimize double counting the same thing in multiple categories, as there is some potential overlap). I assume that you had the assumption that more was better in most categories (except exhibits), which is a very debatable assumption (though maybe there is a cultural divide between the US and Europe).
Fully half of your analysis is fully species based. Are they rated solely by the number of species exhibited OR is there also a subjective basis on how they are displayed? For instance if a zoo has gorilla chimp bonobo 2 (or more!)
orangutan and 3 gibbons are they rated really really high even if kept in barren cages with a couple of tires? Or does a zoo that displays gorillas and chimps only but with spectacular exhibits do better?
With the majority of your categories on animals and exhibits, I am curious which is given priority when assigning a score, the size of the collection or the quality of the habitat? I'm not suggesting that your or any of your panel would disregard animal welfare, but how do you balance between the visitor experience of seeing the animal versus the quality of the habitat for the animal?
Good questions about how we came up with our ratings. First, we saw no problem with double counting. A good African elephant exhibit should help a zoo in its elephant rating, as well as its African animals rating. A giant panda exhibit helps the zoo with its Bonus Animals, Bears, and Asian Animals ratings. Secondly, hopefully you noticed most of the species categories are named "Animals & Exhibits" so both were important to us. Yes, having more animals from a category is good, but also are they "key" or important animals for most visitors. That is, most visitors will regard seeing hippos and rhinos as more important than seeing palm civets. And of course we strongly considered the Exhibit Quality of the exhibits, meaning are they visually pleasing to visitors, are they well themed, and most importantly, are they good for the animals -- so yes, m30t, we did strongly consider animal welfare.

To be honest those 28 categories don't mean much to me. It's great that that's how you all chose to come to your own conclusions. It's great you all have Master's Degrees. It's great you all published a book. At the end of the day it doesn't make your opinion law, it just means more people will hear yours. Your categories and your opinion are not objective to anyone other than yourself and those who agree with you.
But saying you have a Masters degree in statistics, so the analysis must be sound, is just an Argument from Authority.
Again, sorry if I sound like I'm bragging. I just thought some of you might appreciate it if you knew an actual school-trained, experienced statistician was behind this analysis.

On a similar note, you include an option for rides, which I know can be a divisive issue for some members of here. How does your analysis account for the tension between guests who want to view animals and guests who want to go on rides?
If anything, Rides were downgraded, as they are only 1 of 28 categories. So the ride-haters out there should not dislike our ratings for that reason!

I see the reasoning for why these categories were chosen, but this inherently applies that a good zoo needs a big collection with animals from all continents (except Europe :p). I see several ways to disagree with such an assessment, as it very much favors San Diego over smaller zoos like Woodland Park Zoo.
Just an example. Many of y'all on Zoochat rank the North Carolina zoo as in the top 10 zoos in the US. It is my home zoo and I love it, but under your standards it would likely rank as one of the lowest in the US.It only has animals from 2 continents, .......
On the contrary, lintworm, a zoo that has a very "complete" animal collection (but not necessarily a big collection) would rate highest, and then only if those animals are displayed in high quality exhibits. This may surprise you, nczoofan, but I am also a fan of your home zoo and personally regard it as possibly a Top 10 in the US zoo. I actually think the North Carolina Zoo would do quite well with our ratings system. Sure, it would be at the bottom for Australian, Asian, and South American animals, but it would likely do quite well for almost all other categories. You have a great zoo there!

I am also puzzled by Omaha's ranking, as it is always ranked extremely high, even though a lot of the enclosures are substandard for the inhabitants (and some are outright despicable).
Puzzled? Really? I'm puzzled that more people don't recognize the excellence of Omaha! Their "big 3" exhibits (Lied Jungle, Kingdom of the Night, Desert Dome) are all among the Top 20 zoo exhibits in the nation. They have the best zoo aquarium, probably best insectarium, and so much more! And now they're opening a new top-rated children's zoo! Sure they have a few substandard exhibits, but this isn't "The Weakest Link". Those weaker exhibits are completely covered by their many excellent exhibits.

I think that if you really want to rank zoos (which I don't see a big point in, except doing it for fun) and do it somewhat realistically, you will have to rank based on conservation, education, entertainment and research. These are the 4 areas that modern zoos they stand for, so they should be evaluated based on them. I would say that entertainment is still the most important thing, as otherwise the zoo wouldn't exist, so you could give different weightings for each category.
What is objective is that conservation plays a major role in the visitor experience, at least at Bronx. The zoo bases their collection off of their conservation programs, and as such conservation dictates what species visitors will see. Signage and information about their conservation initiatives are also plastered all over the zoo, they even play videos about it in the line for the monorail, in Madagascar!, and in CGF. The guide that runs the monorail talks about the zoo's programs and some of the work they've done in Asia as part of the ride. The $6 admission fee to CGF goes towards the WCS's programs in the Congo. The zoo even has a well-publicised wildlife area around the Bronx River on their grounds. One cannot visit the zoo without being exposed to conservation, it is the biggest aspect of the visitor experience other than the exhibits and the animals themselves.
Conservation in my opinion is the only justification for a modern zoo (though I might make an exception for rescue shelters). It should be given the most weight in any ranking of zoos. It is not the entire weight - animal care and exhibit design are vitally important as well. But any ranking that does not consider conservation is a ranking I would pay no attention to.
I hope no one here thinks I'm saying conservation (or education or research) is unimportant. I've said many time, they are vitally important! I've only said that they are not important to the visitor experience. I am a travel guidebook author and my focus is the visitor. That doesn't mean I don't care about the animals, and quite frankly, most visitors would not enjoy their experience if they are seeing less than well-cared for animals. But in my hundreds of zoo visitor around the world, I've very rarely seen a visitor who got excited about conservation or even education. At my local Indianapolis Zoo, the dolphin show goes overboard with education and honestly, I've heard people around me complaining. Thylo is right that they almost "preach" conservation at his Bronx Zoo, but sorry, that's they way it's come across to many folks I've observed there, as "preachy".

Consider this example: What if we were rating the US Presidents. What would we be rating? I'm guessing most of you would rate them based on their "performance", meaning their record of bringing peace and prosperity (and victory) to the American people and the world. But should we also rate the Presidents on their morality, on how good a husband and father they are/were? If so, then George W Bush and Jimmy Carter would rate very, very high, as both were very moral men and wonderful family men. On the other hand, John Kennedy was famous for his many marital affairs, Harry Truman for his foul mouth, and Ronald Reagan was our first divorced president. Yet, JFK, Truman, and Reagan are all usually ranked among the Top 10 US presidents, while Bush and Carter usually fall much lower in the rankings. In my mind, this is similar to including conservation and education in our ratings. Yes, they are vitally important, just as being a moral, family man is vitally important, but they are not a part of the "performance" of the zoos, at least not for the visitors.

Even if we were to include conservation in our ratings, it would be like Rides (see above), only 1 of 29 categories. So while Bronx would definitely rank as #1 for conservation, this would not pull up its overall ranking much at all. Of course you might suggest that we give this category more weight. But we completely rejected the idea of weighting our categories, as this would definitely make our ratings completely subjective.

Thinking of the impact of this noise on the animals brings me to the most notable/objectionable part of your analysis; the assumption that visitor experience is the determining factor (the only factor in your analysis) for what makes the best zoo. To your credit you are very explicit about prioritizing this, but ultimately I think that it needs to be underscore that your analysis finds the best zoo for visitor experience, not the best zoo.

Finally, I'm treating this as a separate observation as I think it's more of a discussion point that I'm really not sure on the answer to; if we prioritize visitor experience, what type of visitor should zoos cater to? I would wager that the zoochat population makes up a very small percentage of zoo visitors, so would be the best zoo for visitor experience being one that gives us the greatest visitor experience or one that gives the majority of its guests the greatest visitor experience.
By having the 28 very different categories to rate, we hoped that we would be catering to the entire spectrum of different zoo visitors, from bird-lovers, to reptile fans, to children who want to do many rides.

Another category I believe we forget is affordability. The vast majority of people will never see a wild elephant, rhino or lion. A zoo will be the only opportunity for this to happen. In the United States we have massive wealth disparity and a large difference in the wealth of individuals based on their race. If a zoo is supposed to be a resource for the public & education, they need to be accessible to the community they seek to serve. Bronx on most days, way to expensive in my opinion. Yet every single Wednesday its free day, and people can tour most of the zoo for free. San Diego costs $54 dollars for a single day and has no free days. St. louis obviously would do great in this category with its free admission. But if one of your goals is education, then pricing admission so high, than you most defined are disadvantaging lower-income people from going to the zoo. Their is a right middle ground, where the zoo can be a resource for the public & still protecting its bottom line.
I'm curious about the omission of such items as parking, accessibility of pathways, and as @nczoofan suggests, affordability. These are all factors that impact the visitor experience (the first two particularly for visitors with mobility issues). It is not that including these factors would radically alter your results, but I think they would provide a more comprehensive overview.
We did consider including affordability (cost), but we concluded this would be mixing up the concepts of quality and value. Consider buying an automobile. I could buy a new Toyota Corolla for starting at $19,000 (US$), and I'd be getting a good value car that is very reliable and gets great mileage. On the other hand, I couldn't touch a new Porsche for less than $60,000 (probably a lot more). While arguably the Toyota is a much better value, who would argue the Porsche isn't the better vehicle? We thought, back to zoos, price should not be included in the ratings, but they do matter when deciding if paying more for San Diego is worth it, due to it being the top-rated zoo. Yes, parking is important, but (outside of cost) there's not all that much difference between the zoos in parking. Plus it's somewhat of an "outside the zoo" factor. Should we also consider the roads and highways used to get to the zoo, and if it has good public transportation access? Maybe, but we thought not.

Wow, those are strong words. You have the right to believe San Diego is better than Bronx (or even Omaha or any zoo if you want) but calling those who believe Bronx is the top 1 zoo in the U.S desperate when it is clearly a matter of opinion and is quite subjective doesn't seem right to me.
Bronx is my favorite zoo and, to me, the best zoo due to its overall excellent exhibits, overall very large and extremely natural enclosures, insanely large collection size, extremely diverse collection including many rarely seen species, its display of its own grand history, and most importantly superb conservation programs/captive breeding initiatives. Those are my criteria for evaluating a zoo and just because you have a fancy statistical analysis that excludes several of those doesn't mean you get to declare one zoo better than the other and call anyone who disagrees "desperate". ~Thylo
@ANyhuis' entire post is a declaration of San Diego's definitive superiority and of Bronx's definitive interiority, saying that these things are quantifiable (something I find odd considering the numbers I provided in my short-essay yesterday suggest very different results, implying the entire analysis was handled almost purely from a subjective point of view) and flatout insulting anyone (namely myself) who is of a different opinion.
This thread contains some borderline personal attacks, which is one of the things I track as a moderator (as do my fellow moderators). Please remember to keep it civil, as any posts that are deemed inappropriate are subject to being edited or deleted.
I'm sorry if anyone thinks I was intentionally insulting anyone. I did mean to. Thylo, you are obviously a huge fan of your Bronx Zoo, from all the things you've said. You are clearly having a hard time accepting that your Bronx may not only be America's #1 zoo, but at least one statistical study says it's no better than #5. That's not an insult of either you or the Bronx Zoo. The #5 zoo in the USA is still a very high ranking! I love the Bronx Zoo!
 
On the contrary, lintworm, a zoo that has a very "complete" animal collection (but not necessarily a big collection) would rate highest, and then only if those animals are displayed in high quality exhibits.

So, basically; a zoo like Walsrode which is often viewed as one of the best zoos in Europe wouldn't be ranked very high in your listing because it hasn't got a complete collection (only birds except for 2 species of mammals IIRC)?

What about Burgers', a zoo which lacks in reptiles and amphibians. Yet many, many people view at as the top zoo in Europe. Would that also be the same problem?

Final exemple, Nuremberg; which welfare-wise might be one of the top top zoos in Europe but although their collection is expanding, they still cruelly lack in smaller animals. I still view it as one of the zoos I'd prefer the most if I visited it, I thin. Is that view flawed?

But should we also rate the Presidents on their morality, on how good a husband and father they are/were?

Off-topic but not at all for me. Private life is private life (unless it's illegal which doesn't equal morally wrong), as long as he is a good president, then I don't care about what he does in his private life.

Puzzled? Really? I'm puzzled that more people don't recognize the excellence of Omaha! Their "big 3" exhibits (Lied Jungle, Kingdom of the Night, Desert Dome) are all among the Top 20 zoo exhibits in the nation. They have the best zoo aquarium, probably best insectarium, and so much more! And now they're opening a new top-rated children's zoo! Sure they have a few substandard exhibits, but this isn't "The Weakest Link". Those weaker exhibits are completely covered by their many excellent exhibits.

Yes and I am of the same opinion. We always criticize tremendous zoos for some of their bad exhibits. Whether it be Tierpark Berlin and the Alfred-Brehm Haus or Zürich and the Ape House. Most people rank them lower than they would love to because of that. Looking at Omaha's gallery, some exhibits are downright awful in size, honestly. So why should we criticize TP Berlin and Zürich but not Omaha, how is that fair? It's not because a zoo is great that its substandard exhibits are justified, they are absolutely not and as long as they still exist, the criticism seems nothing but fair.

You are clearly having a hard time accepting that your Bronx may not only be America's #1 zoo, but at least one statistical study says it's no better than #5. That's not an insult of either you or the Bronx Zoo. The #5 zoo in the USA is still a very high ranking! I love the Bronx Zoo!

This is the statement that I have most trouble comprehending. The thing is while you tried to make an objective listing of American zoos by (only) taking 28 categories in account, liking or disliking a zoo may also be because of many totally subjective categories. The general atmosphere (and do not tell me you could quantify that when every people would feel it differently), how crowded the zoo was when he visited, the presence of a certain species that he likes etc... All of those are rather subjective things that you would have a hard time to quantify but they are still an important part of why we like a zoo. As such, can you please tell me why Thylo is having a hard time grasping that Bronx isn't the top 1 zoo in America when he thinks so? Should we take your study to the letter, as a sort of Bible of ranking which we cannot disagree with. If a study tried to rank American zoos as you do (which is nonsense to me honestly, I'm not trying to be rude; I really like the work you've put into this but as I said it's just sound so subjective) and found Bronx was ranked higher or lower, would you accept said ranking because they used different categories (maybe more?) or are you convinced your ranking is the only true, correct one?
 
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I even hesitated to let SnowLeopard bring them up here, knowing the controversy they would ignite.
Surely this is the first in a long line of problems with your analysis. If you have your own doubts about your own research, then why do you defend it as the foundation of your opinions? Proper research and analyses done by proper researchers is never doubted and is usually released to the public freely. This certainly is why zoos educate visitors about their own research.
Valid criticism, though once again, we were doing this for fun. But then again, it's not exactly true that our sample size was n=3. Each of us did 28 ratings, so it could be said that n=3*28= 84, though that introduces a high amount of inter-rater correlation. On top of that, the 3 of us have all been to hundreds of zoos worldwide, with SL and me having been to 300-400, so we have a lot of experience evaluating zoos.
Sure, 84 ratings were factored into each zoo’s rating, but this does not hide the fact that the origin of it all came from 3 people. A sampling of 3 people is nowhere near enough for a true representation.
We definitely did our ratings completely independently. But we did reserve the right to change a rating or two when we saw very different numbers from the other 2. This resulted when we might have forgotten a key new animal or key new exhibit that's been added perhaps since our last visit to the zoo. In such a situation, yes, we might have modified our ratings with more information.
Is this not a bit like cheating on a test? If an exhibit or species has not been memorable enough to make an impression the first rating, why should it be factored in in a second?
While you are correct that our ratings were subjective, one principle of ranking statistics is that if you accumulate enough of them, they become both more objective and more normally distributed. And we are NOT asserting that our opinions are superior to anyone else's, only that we did this analysis WITHOUT aiming for a particular result. We were open to whatever the final numbers would tell us.
Yes, but you only accumulated three. As already mentioned by myself and others, that’s not enough for a normal distribution. You may not be asserting your opinion over others directly, but the whole “I, a masters-level statistician, have come up with a statistical analysis to determine America’s top 5 zoos” deal makes it seem so.
Good questions about how we came up with our ratings. First, we saw no problem with double counting. A good African elephant exhibit should help a zoo in its elephant rating, as well as its African animals rating. A giant panda exhibit helps the zoo with its Bonus Animals, Bears, and Asian Animals ratings. Secondly, hopefully you noticed most of the species categories are named "Animals & Exhibits" so both were important to us. Yes, having more animals from a category is good, but also are they "key" or important animals for most visitors. That is, most visitors will regard seeing hippos and rhinos as more important than seeing palm civets. And of course we strongly considered the Exhibit Quality of the exhibits, meaning are they visually pleasing to visitors, are they well themed, and most importantly, are they good for the animals
Surely, the lumping of “animals & exhibits” was meant so that both are weighted equally. But can this really be assured without having each as a separate rating? I am sure you all probably gave the San Diego Zoo an easy top rating when it came to primates. And it’s collection deserves one! But the same really can’t be said for its exhibits. Certainly not its four corn crib cages, orangutan exhibit with no more naturalism than a meadow, and many other examples.
Puzzled? Really? I'm puzzled that more people don't recognize the excellence of Omaha! Their "big 3" exhibits (Lied Jungle, Kingdom of the Night, Desert Dome) are all among the Top 20 zoo exhibits in the nation. They have the best zoo aquarium, probably best insectarium, and so much more! And now they're opening a new top-rated children's zoo! Sure they have a few substandard exhibits, but this isn't "The Weakest Link". Those weaker exhibits are completely covered by their many excellent exhibits.
The good exhibits of a zoo don’t vouch for the bad. Omaha could have the best Nile hippo exhibit in the world, but that wouldn’t change the fact its pygmy hippos and tapirs, terrestrial mammals, are stuck in small exhibits with minimal land space.
Consider this example: What if we were rating the US Presidents. What would we be rating? I'm guessing most of you would rate them based on their "performance", meaning their record of bringing peace and prosperity (and victory) to the American people and the world. But should we also rate the Presidents on their morality, on how good a husband and father they are/were? If so, then George W Bush and Jimmy Carter would rate very, very high, as both were very moral men and wonderful family men. On the other hand, John Kennedy was famous for his many marital affairs, Harry Truman for his foul mouth, and Ronald Reagan was our first divorced president. Yet, JFK, Truman, and Reagan are all usually ranked among the Top 10 US presidents, while Bush and Carter usually fall much lower in the rankings. In my mind, this is similar to including conservation and education in our ratings. Yes, they are vitally important, just as being a moral, family man is vitally important, but they are not a part of the "performance" of the zoos, at least not for the visitors.
But it’s just the reverse. The animals at the zoos themselves are the wives and bad morals. Yes, it’s very sad and unfortunate. But as for a worldwide impact? Conservation and research affect species in the wild and those captive worldwide. They are the zoos’ true, noteworthy performance.
But we completely rejected the idea of weighting our categories, as this would definitely make our ratings completely subjective.
But they are weighted by nature! You have seven mammal-specific categories. Yet there are only two for birds, one each for invertebrates and fish, and reptiles and amphibians aren’t each deemed important enough to have their own category! You have thousands and thousands lumped into one or two categories. Yet elephants, a group of three species, get their own rating. Bears, a group of eight species, get their own rating. Great apes, a group of seven species (of course excluding humans) get their own rating. And what of the zoos that don’t have animals in some categories? San Diego doesn’t have a single nocturnal exhibit, nor does Saint Louis. And what exactly is supposed to be a “bonus animal superstar”??

There are far too many flaws with this three-person “analysis” for it to be considered legitimate in any form. You say it’s only for fun, and that’s great. But don’t provide it as your true reasoning for thinking one zoo is better than another.
 
There are far too many flaws with this three-person “analysis” for it to be considered legitimate in any form. You say it’s only for fun, and that’s great. But don’t provide it as your true reasoning for thinking one zoo is better than another.

In your argument that this statistical analysis is largely a load of old codswallop, I’d tend to agree with you.

However, it is no more a load of codswallop than anyone else’s attempts to rank their favourite, or even the best, zoos.

If I say that the best zoo in Europe is Berlin, I’m revealing my own prejudices, my own interests and areas of focus. It is impossible to unequivocally state that one zoo is, empirically, the “best”.

All that Allen has done has been to attempt, with some friends, to have some fun putting zoos into some sort of order. Unless I am missing something, he has not, at any stage, made any claims for the higher truth of what conclusions are reached here. I’m not sure his post merits the vitriolic kicking it receives from some who, then, attempt to shout it down. It’s only a bit of fun! Codswallop, yes, but with no claim to be anything more than that.
 
In your argument that this statistical analysis is largely a load of old codswallop, I’d tend to agree with you.

However, it is no more a load of codswallop than anyone else’s attempts to rank their favourite, or even the best, zoos.

If I say that the best zoo in Europe is Berlin, I’m revealing my own prejudices, my own interests and areas of focus. It is impossible to unequivocally state that one zoo is, empirically, the “best”.

All that Allen has done has been to attempt, with some friends, to have some fun putting zoos into some sort of order. Unless I am missing something, he has not, at any stage, made any claims for the higher truth of what conclusions are reached here. I’m not sure his post merits the vitriolic kicking it receives from some who, then, attempt to shout it down. It’s only a bit of fun! Codswallop, yes, but with no claim to be anything more than that.

I disagree with your last alinea, though it was never said outright, the posts definitely seemed to imply that SDZ is a better zoo than the Bronx and others. They acknowledge that it is there opinion but they imply that their opinion is better than others as they have quantified it in their own extensive way.
 
I agree, the posts definitely seemed to try and rank zoos "objectively" (according to @ANyhuis and his friends parameters) saying for exemple that people were desperate to think Bronx should be number #1 in America or that Thylo should acknowledge that Bronx is the 5th best zoo in the U.S.
 
Since Henry Doorly has been mentioned recently, I'd mention that their problem exhibits are quite a bit fewer than they used to be. So it's not quite fair to view older pics and harshly judge the zoo when some of those exhibits either aren't there any longer or have been modified.
 
If so, then George W Bush and Jimmy Carter would rate very, very high, as both were very moral men and wonderful family men.

Your mileage may vary..... :p

In your argument that this statistical analysis is largely a load of old codswallop, I’d tend to agree with you.

However, it is no more a load of codswallop than anyone else’s attempts to rank their favourite, or even the best, zoos.

The difference is that everyone else's attempts to rank their favourite zoos aren't accompanied by repeated and explicit assertions that they have a qualification which somehow renders their opinion more valid and objective :p
 
Your mileage may vary..... :p



The difference is that everyone else's attempts to rank their favourite zoos aren't accompanied by repeated and explicit assertions that they have a qualification which somehow renders their opinion more valid and objective :p

That’s not how I interpreted Allen’s post. He was explaining the methodology and that he has qualifications to support that methodology. I don’t think Allen was claiming objective validity for the results, only the approach.

FWIW, I’d find it very interesting to see what popped out if a bunch of us who had visited a critical number of leading European zoos were to follow his approach. I suspect most people would agree with the results more than they expected to.
 
I don’t think Allen was claiming objective validity for the results, only the approach.

I refer you to the following, especially the highlighted segment:

As a Master's Degree level statistician, with over 35 years experience as a statistician, I strongly stand by our analysis! It was done the way many things in society are compared and evaluated, and by combining our ratings from many different aspects of the zoos, our analysis method took a lot of the subjectivity out of the analysis and our conclusions could validly be considered mostly objective.
 
@ANyhuis may have never directly claimed that his rankings are the definitive, but constantly asserting that he has a Masters Degree in statistics and that he's (and SL's) been to more zoos than us so he knows what he's talking about does more than imply that his analysis should be taken as fact- not to mention that load of bs that is his final paragraph. Don't say you're not claiming your rating is the definitive and then tell me that my opinion is still wrong and my arguments are nothing more than me having a hard time accepting that. I'm not having a hard time accepting anything. People have asked me to comment on San Diego and Bronx and I have not only done so, but I have more than backed up my opinions with not just subjective views, but with factual numbers. Bronx has more mammals than SDZ, Bronx has slightly less birds but in aviaries that are just as big or larger the majority of the time, Bronx has more reptiles, more amphibians, and certainly more fishes. Bronx also works with more endangered species. Their enclosures are known for being consistently considerably larger than most other zoos, especially when it comes to ungulates. They have the best gorilla habitat by far, including a two-story indoor space larger than the outdoor enclosures at various zoos including Santa Barbara, Cleveland, Memphis, and Fort Worth and only about 1,000sqft smaller than the outdoor yards at Columbus and Smithsonian. They have roughly two dozen nocturnal habitats. This is a zoo that only has maybe five enclosures tops that most people agree are poor. When you did you analysis they also held various species that no other zoo in the US did/does and they hold at least two species that would most likely be Extinct today were it not for the zoo's direct action, two things that should fit nicely into your "special bonus animals" category. The zoo should have done phenomenally under your analysis. Yet it didn't, and that's likely because it is biased to let a certain type of zoo come out on top in the first place. SL and others have said numerous times that SDZ's huge glaring dark spots are outweighed by their "overall excellence" even though, as I've shown using real numbers, their exhibit size is really nothing special so there already appears to be a bias towards that zoo and, as @jayjds2 implies, it doesn't sound this zoo's bad exhibits/enclosures were weighed as much as their good ones. The zoo keeps two elephant species, which as you point out would give them a nice bonus in three or four of your categories but likely doesn't account for the fact that they're all in non-breeding situations and mixed together in a scenario that's less than desirable in the modern zoo world. Unless they're not mixed together, in which case they're kept in smaller groups than the AZA standard. Either way your analysis is poised to praise the zoo for this situation while ignoring the downsides. You also mention how having a panda automatically knocks the zoo up big time in three categories. Zoos like Bronx don't keep pandas because they are ridiculously expensive and don't fall within the zoo's conservation-oriented collection plans. Your bias is also shown in your discussion on why zoo prices don't matter for your evaluation, saying that SDZ is a top notch zoo and as such it does not matter if it is ridiculously expensive. You say you were all surprised when SDZ came out on top, yet the entire study is designed to put the zoo on top.

And for the record, I have visited Bronx multiple times a year for seven years and I have never once heard anyone call the zoo "preachy" for publicizing their conservation efforts. It probably does happen, but it's definitely not a major complaint.

~Thylo
 
@ANyhuis may have never directly claimed that his rankings are the definitive, but constantly asserting that he has a Masters Degree in statistics and that he's (and SL's) been to more zoos than us so he knows what he's talking about does more than imply that his analysis should be taken as fact- not to mention that load of bs that is his final paragraph. Don't say you're not claiming your rating is the definitive and then tell me that my opinion is still wrong and my arguments are nothing more than me having a hard time accepting that. I'm not having a hard time accepting anything. People have asked me to comment on San Diego and Bronx and I have not only done so, but I have more than backed up my opinions with not just subjective views, but with factual numbers. Bronx has more mammals than SDZ, Bronx has slightly less birds but in aviaries that are just as big or larger the majority of the time, Bronx has more reptiles, more amphibians, and certainly more fishes. Bronx also works with more endangered species. Their enclosures are known for being consistently considerably larger than most other zoos, especially when it comes to ungulates. They have the best gorilla habitat by far, including a two-story indoor space larger than the outdoor enclosures at various zoos including Santa Barbara, Cleveland, Memphis, and Fort Worth and only about 1,000sqft smaller than the outdoor yards at Columbus and Smithsonian. They have roughly two dozen nocturnal habitats. This is a zoo that only has maybe five enclosures tops that most people agree are poor. When you did you analysis they also held various species that no other zoo in the US did/does and they hold at least two species that would most likely be Extinct today were it not for the zoo's direct action, two things that should fit nicely into your "special bonus animals" category. The zoo should have done phenomenally under your analysis. Yet it didn't, and that's likely because it is biased to let a certain type of zoo come out on top in the first place. SL and others have said numerous times that SDZ's huge glaring dark spots are outweighed by their "overall excellence" even though, as I've shown using real numbers, their exhibit size is really nothing special so there already appears to be a bias towards that zoo and, as @jayjds2 implies, it doesn't sound this zoo's bad exhibits/enclosures were weighed as much as their good ones. The zoo keeps two elephant species, which as you point out would give them a nice bonus in three or four of your categories but likely doesn't account for the fact that they're all in non-breeding situations and mixed together in a scenario that's less than desirable in the modern zoo world. Unless they're not mixed together, in which case they're kept in smaller groups than the AZA standard. Either way your analysis is poised to praise the zoo for this situation while ignoring the downsides. You also mention how having a panda automatically knocks the zoo up big time in three categories. Zoos like Bronx don't keep pandas because they are ridiculously expensive and don't fall within the zoo's conservation-oriented collection plans. Your bias is also shown in your discussion on why zoo prices don't matter for your evaluation, saying that SDZ is a top notch zoo and as such it does not matter if it is ridiculously expensive. You say you were all surprised when SDZ came out on top, yet the entire study is designed to put the zoo on top.

And for the record, I have visited Bronx multiple times a year for seven years and I have never once heard anyone call the zoo "preachy" for publicizing their conservation efforts. It probably does happen, but it's definitely not a major complaint.

~Thylo

So I love the Bronx Zoo and place a very high value on its conservation impact and exhibit quality, two variables in which no other zoo comes close, IMO.

However, one variable that may not have been “statistically accounted for” but should probably be considered is the overall sense of momentum and progress of a zoo. San Diego and Omaha (in particular) have been juggernauts over the past decade, adding major new exhibits and features at a remarkable pace. The Bronx has not; its last major addition is now ten years old. Had it maintained the furious pace of improvement it saw from 1985 (Jungleworld) to 2003 (Tiger Mountain), this conversation would be very different.

That said, I am consistently underwhelmed by everything new at San Diego since the brilliant Kopje exhibit opened over 30 years ago. Strictly a personal opinion, which I feel no obligation or desire to justify with spurious “statistical analysis” (although I enjoy others’ attempts to “Sheridanize” their arguments!).
 
So I love the Bronx Zoo and place a very high value on its conservation impact and exhibit quality, two variables in which no other zoo comes close, IMO.

However, one variable that may not have been “statistically accounted for” but should probably be considered is the overall sense of momentum and progress of a zoo. San Diego and Omaha (in particular) have been juggernauts over the past decade, adding major new exhibits and features at a remarkable pace. The Bronx has not; its last major addition is now ten years old. Had it maintained the furious pace of improvement it saw from 1985 (Jungleworld) to 2003 (Tiger Mountain), this conversation would be very different.

That said, I am consistently underwhelmed by everything new at San Diego since the brilliant Kopje exhibit opened over 30 years ago. Strictly a personal opinion, which I feel no obligation or desire to justify with spurious “statistical analysis” (although I enjoy others’ attempts to “Sheridanize” their arguments!).

Some very good points and I found myself agreeing with lots of your post, but I must ask, have you been to San Diego since Africa Rocks was fully opened? That exhibit was definitely not underwhelming.
 
Some very good points and I found myself agreeing with lots of your post, but I must ask, have you been to San Diego since Africa Rocks was fully opened? That exhibit was definitely not underwhelming.

I have not visited, but from all the photos posted I can agree it is not “underwhelming,” as it is far too big and showy to be described that way. It appears, however, to be ugly and poorly executed (if one of its presumed goals was to create a naturalistic and beautiful set of habitats). Very intrusive mesh structures and some of the worst artificial rock work are what stand out to me.
 
My takeaway from this discussion is the reinforcement of a philosophy that I already have held for a while: rating zoos for anything other than personal use is pointless. Everybody's opinions about what should be quantified and how disqualifies the possibility of even having a universal ratings structure. @ANyhuis's rating may be fine for himself and SL, but it is clearly not for others in this thread, which is to be expected. Zoos *cannot* be rated objectively as a whole. There is too much nuance and subjectivity involved, even in subcategories like species and exhibits. Feel free to disagree, but I think the 15 pages of this discussion should be convincing enough of my position.
 
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