True, but could you imagine a zoo promoting a new exhibit such as "Giraffe Kingdom" or something like that. They just aren't the money makers great apes or penguins are; more of a secondary animals.
- A suggestion for small-scale superstar: Tasmanian devils?
Quite. Now that they have established beachheads in both Europe and North America I can see them expanding internationally quite rapidly. 100 collections outside Australia by 2025 is quite feasible.
The challenge is displaying them. I've seen devils that are reliably hyper-active through the day, and others that never leave their dens during visitor hours. I wonder if the solution might be to hold 3-4 devils and rotate them through a single display enclosure through the day, as this might stimulate more activity whilst the animals are in the exhibit they associate with scents of the other devils, scatter feeds and the like.
Also in Japan. Is 100 the actual goal that the ZAA set? That is quite a large number, especially if they don't intend any of them to breed. Also, any idea about what additional zoos might acquire them?
I agree with you about the variability in activity. The devils at Los Angeles were extremely active when they arrived; they were running loops constantly around their new enclosure. When I visited them later in the year, I only saw one resting in plain sight. Both times I've seen them elsewhere (San Diego and St. Louis, respectively) they were sleeping in their den.
@Jurek7: All of those make sense to me except for prairie dogs and raccoons. I have never seen people crowd around an exhibit for either species, or even show any interest in them (unless the prairie dog exhibit has a pop-up dome or two, children flock to those).
except for prairie dogs and raccoons.
I personally think many zoochatters (and also some zoo directors) overestimate the importance of superstar species. Very, very few mainstream zoo visitors will be drawn to a single species (except people who already visit regularly). They hardly know which zoo has which species. They just want to see a lot of (preferably active) animals in a nice setting.
Do visitors really not like/care about hoofstock as much as everyone on this site makes them out to?
But don't people love giraffes, zebras, bison, moose, wildebeest, gazelles, okapi, camels and Mongolian wild horsesIf they did, they wouldn't be disappearing from zoos. To many guests, they are all "deers".
They do, and most of those are not phase-out.But don't people love giraffes, zebras, bison, moose, wildebeest, gazelles, okapi, camels and Mongolian wild horses
Some personal notes of mine (all of these applicable for the US, I don't know about the situation elsewhere):
- I would say that sharks are a superstar species for sure
- Penguins are DEFINITELY an established superstar animal, and countless zoo advertising campaigns have focused on them
- Komodo dragons seem to be bucking the trend of no superstar reptiles. Giant tortoises are popular, but I wouldn't call them a superstar species
- I would absolutely say that river hippos are a superstar animal. Pygmy hippos less so
- Otters can be superstar animals for smaller zoos and aquariums, but for larger institutions they easily get overshadowed
- I didn't see if anyone had mentioned it, but a jaguar could potentially be a superstar (it would require marketing, not popular enough to be a superstar on its own). Same with cheetahs
- Sea lions are also definitely a superstar animal, with several new pinniped exhibits being evidence of that. Seals less so. Walruses are borderline; with proper marketing, I think they could be
- A suggestion for small-scale superstar: Tasmanian devils?
Prairie dogs and raccons are quite popular. They tend to be quite visable and active, and are cute. They are not as popular as giraffes, but more like the level of coati or otter.
I personally think many zoochatters (and also some zoo directors) overestimate the importance of superstar species. Very, very few mainstream zoo visitors will be drawn to a single species (except people who already visit regularly). They hardly know which zoo has which species. They just want to see a lot of (preferably active) animals in a nice setting. But if it's a big an thus expensive zoo, visitors do tend to expect large animals, which is probably why almost any well known species of megafauna has been suggested in this topic. If a superstar species is a species that (because of it's presence alone) makes people choose that specific zoo, I think there a very few real superstar species:
1. Dolphin
2. Killer whale
3. Giant panda
4. Maaaaybe elephant (I'm not sure about that one)
All others can be discribed as "crowd pleasers", including gorilla, giraffe, tiger, lion, penguin and polar bear. But so are yellow-thoated marten, little pied cormorant and rhino iguana, if a zoo displays them well. I've seen visitors being really enthousiastic about those three species too (probably more so than most regular visitors seeing a tiger again).
But don't people love giraffes, zebras, bison, moose, wildebeest, gazelles, okapi, camels and Mongolian wild horses
Giraffes and zebra yes. Camels have recognizability. The rest not as much.