CMTM
Well-Known Member
Calling the exhibit at Cleveland an orangutan "tank" is, in my opinion, an unfair analysis of their orangutan exhibit, which I felt was actually a really solid exhibit on my recent visit. Sure, having outdoor access would be nice, but by all other metrics, the orangutan exhibit at Cleveland meets or exceeds the standards for orangutan exhibits. Most notably, I noticed on my visit that four of the five orangutans were actually above the ground, utilizing the various ropes and climbing opportunities in the exhibit. This alone is huge, as way too often zoos have designed primarily horizontal orangutan exhibit, in which the animals don't have that opportunity to exhibit natural climbing behavior. I'd actually call Cleveland one of the better orangutan exhibits I've seen, with the utilization of climbing opportunities being a big part of this. As for Primates, Cats, and Aquatics, I actually felt it was a really nice exhibit, gorillas aside. The gorilla area in PCAT was certainly poor, but a lot of the other exhibits have become much better homes for some of the inhabitants, through choosing smaller primate species and combining multiple habitats into larger ones. Sure, the exhibits are far from naturalistic, but naturalism as the gold standard aesthetic is often contrary to what's best for the animals. Rather, what needs to be achieved is naturalism as a behavior- and the Cleveland exhibits are able to achieve this quite nicely (and will be able to do an even better job of it once the gorillas move to the Rain Forest expansion).
I agree with many of your points for sure. Keep in mind I visited four different facilities in 72 hours, New England Aquarium, Cleveland, Shedd, and Brookfield in that order with Shedd and Brookfield being on the same day (it was AWESOME). This led to me perhaps unfairly compare the four facilities. The Cleveland Orangutan exhibit reminded me very much of the Giant Ocean Tank at NEAQ, both were centerpiece exhibits made largely out of concrete and glass with artificial structure within. They both looked about the same size as well (tropicworld's orang area also seemed around the same size footprint wise). I understand that the Cleveland orangs do quite well in that enclosure and I certainly appreciate the vertical space, but I just feel weird about great apes being on concrete, surrounded by glass, without outdoor access. It reminded me of the green tiled cells I've seen in pictures taken before my time; sterile, boring, and better off left in the past.
My background is mostly in aquatics so I was pretty appalled by the Primate Cat and Aquatics Building. In addition to some very cramped and bored looking snow leopards, two depressed looking silverbacks in an enclosure the size of an urban back yard, and a loris that was doing nervous laps faster than I was aware loris' were able to move, all the fishes looked kind of rough and cramped. There was a shockingly tiny blue pool with a Blacktip reef shark swimming in unhealthily tight laps. Ram-ventilators need room to have a swim/glide pattern, they can't be "kicking" constantly or it causes serious health issues.
As others have pointed out though, the situation for the gorillas has improved and will continue to improve, and the orangs will get a bit of an upgrade as well. Further the poor shark isn't even there any more. When Primate Forest opens I'll be revisiting Cleveland for sure, they are definitely capable of incredible exhibits (elephants and wolves were both great), which is why they more out of date aspects were so disappointing.