What species would you ban from zoos?

I must say I find it interesting how one of the tags here is "orca". Understandable since captive orcas is a controversial topic. What is everyone's opinions on them?
 
None. As long as it can be kept with high welfare I don’t think there should be restrictions on what species can be kept. Once governments start banning animals (such as cetaceans in many countries) it becomes a lot easier for AR groups to look at the next group of animals such as elephants and look for ways to villianize zoos. Now I do think there should be bans on keeping many dangerous animals privately as pets. I think the government doesn’t do enough to maintain the welfare of animals in “roadside” zoos so there should be more strict accrediting requirements to keep animals such as big cats, elephants, apes, and venomous snakes.
 
Giant Sallamanders, Siamese Crocodiles and Giraffes are at risk of hybridisation in zoos.A ban may be a little harsh but there should be restrictions.
 
None with the exception of humans, I don’t need to go to a zoo to see them. Every other species on the planet I don’t believe should ever be “banned” from captivity; even if they’re kept unsuccessfully we learn so much from them that we would never know from their wild counterparts. Also as Echobeast previously said, banning species from captivity opens the floodgates to damage zoos themselves.
 
I must say I find it interesting how one of the tags here is "orca". Understandable since captive orcas is a controversial topic. What is everyone's opinions on them?
I'm glad you caught that! I was wondering if anybody would. I personally think that orcas should not be kept in captivity. There are plenty of examples why but the best current one I can think of is Lolita at the Miami Seaquarium. One problem is that she was wild caught in an infamous capture that killed a few orcas.
 
I'm glad you caught that! I was wondering if anybody would. I personally think that orcas should not be kept in captivity. There are plenty of examples why but the best current one I can think of is Lolita at the Miami Seaquarium. One problem is that she was wild caught in an infamous capture that killed a few orcas.
I don't think that one incident in a capture should call for a ban
 
I'm glad you caught that! I was wondering if anybody would. I personally think that orcas should not be kept in captivity. There are plenty of examples why but the best current one I can think of is Lolita at the Miami Seaquarium. One problem is that she was wild caught in an infamous capture that killed a few orcas.

Lolita is an odd case, as she doesn't really represent the reality of the vast majority of captive orcas. She is an animal that was captured very early on, is known to be highly averse to change, which is why the Miami Seaquarium has not updated her exhibit, and she lives alone with a group of bottlenose dolphins, which is also somewhat unusual these days. Any animal that would be captured in the modern era would be in quite a different situation, and China's current drive towards orcas is showing that.

It should also be pointed out that YouTube is not a source, especially when the description alone uses highly emotionally charged language with an implicit bias, like "forced to perform" and "stolen."
 
Giant Sallamanders, Siamese Crocodiles and Giraffes are at risk of hybridisation in zoos.A ban may be a little harsh but there should be restrictions.

I have no idea where you got your information about Siamese Crocodiles from but it's wrong, yes there are hybrids in captivity but most are in none breeding situations now, in fact the captive population is more pure than a lot of the wild thanks to crocodile farms mixing the species up.
 
Not just a species, but any cetacean, they are one of the animal groups, who sufferes the most in captivity, and it does not help the wild populations, espically, since most whale species in captivity are born in the wild.

The only cetacean, I belive could be kept in captivity are maby river dolphins. But again, the fact that they don't breed well in captivity, and that the wild population are in danger of extinction. It would be a terrible idea to try to keep importing them.
 
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