Also interesting, is that the majority of iconic species are from Africa.
"What Zoos Can Do: The Leading Zoological Gardens of Europe 2010-2020" by Anthony Sheridan is a brand-new book that is almost 400 pages in length, weighs a lot due to the glossy, thick pages and is a must-own for all zoo fans. In it Sheridan ranks the best 80 zoos on the continent, but there is a tremendous amount of other information as well.
Thanks for the great data snowleopard. I'm really surprised that monkeys aren't on the list. I was under the impression that everybody is crazy about monkeys.
I looked up the book and it does look good. It also is quite expensive. I'll put it on my Christmas list.
For the few zoos that exhibit dolphins (of any species) or belugas, they are almost universally a top attraction (Brookfield, Indianapolis, Minnesota, Duisburg, formerly Tacoma, Oklahoma City).
Judging by recent investments in US zoos, elephants, polar bears and gorillas are the true superstars.
While Zoochat types and crossword puzzle experts may salivate over okapis, I don't think they meet the "superstar" definition.
I have a copy of this book,and have to say that for me quite a few of the collections in it wouldn't even get in my top 80 collections in Europe,I say this as somebody that has visited a mere 300 collections in Europe,for me there are many collections that are far better than some of the ones in the book,but they do not fit Anthonys warped criteria to be included in the book!"What Zoos Can Do: The Leading Zoological Gardens of Europe 2010-2020" by Anthony Sheridan is a brand-new book that is almost 400 pages in length, weighs a lot due to the glossy, thick pages and is a must-own for all zoo fans. In it Sheridan ranks the best 80 zoos on the continent, but there is a tremendous amount of other information as well.
He actually compiled his own list of "iconic species" in zoos and the 15 are: elephant, giraffe, okapi, lion, tiger, snow leopard, chimpanzee/bonobo, gorilla, orangutan, polar bear, hippo (either species), rhinoceros, gibbon and ringtail lemur.
There is a second list that he compiled of the next 14 iconic species: spider monkey, colobus, meerkat, zebra, penguin, ostrich/rhea/emu/cassowary, pelican, flamingo, macaw, birds of prey, crocodile/alligator, komodo dragon, giant tortoise and anaconda/python.
To top it off he lists 6 unusual iconic species that are rare in zoos: giant panda, koala, dolphin, manatee, giant otter and walrus.
In a slightly earlier section of the book Sheridan spoke with all 80 zoo directors and here is his list of the 15 most popular zoo mammals (in order): elephant, gorilla, giraffe, lion, chimpanzee, tiger, polar bear, orangutan, sea lion/seal, rhinoceros, hippo (either species), meerkat, black/brown bear. It is interesting that there are 3 great apes in the top 8 most popular animals, and that elephants and giraffes are amongst the most popular of all.
Until Disney makes an okapi movie I guess they are stuck as metaphorical character actors, but at least they're in the picture.
In a slightly earlier section of the book Sheridan spoke with all 80 zoo directors and here is his list of the 15 most popular zoo mammals (in order): elephant, gorilla, giraffe, lion, chimpanzee, tiger, polar bear, orangutan, sea lion/seal, rhinoceros, hippo (either species), meerkat, black/brown bear. It is interesting that there are 3 great apes in the top 8 most popular animals, and that elephants and giraffes are amongst the most popular of all.
So all the species any 5 year-old can name
@DavidBrown, now we know who could best answer your inquiry!
@Zooplantman:
Zooplantman, has there ever been or are there any ongoing attempts by zoos/botanical gardens to create "stars" out of specific plant species? One example that may qualify is the media attention that the corpse flowers get whenever they bloom.
Do botanical gardens do what zoos do in terms of presenting plant species that visitors know, love, and expect to see (i.e., do they use "superstars" to)?
In looking at pictures of the new Gondwanaland exhibit at the Leipzig Zoo it strikes me that there are cases where the exhibit itself is the star, regardless of the species within it.
The examples that come to mind are exhibits portraying an ecosystem or group of ecosystems and the landscaping and exhibit design are arguably bigger stars than the exhibited species.
Desert Ecosystems: Desert Dome, Omaha Zoo
Rain Forest Ecosystems not built around great apes: Gondwanaland, Lied Jungle (Omaha), Minnesota's tropical exhibit
African Ecosystems: Dallas Zoo's multi-ecosystem monorail exhibit