In North America it seems that no one knows the difference between Africa and South America.Regarding people getting things wrong through not reading signs, sometimes they can display their ignorance even when they do. Last year I saw a woman looking at the sign about cusimanses. The signs included a map of the world with the species's native range. This woman pointed at the shaded part of West Africa and said to her companions "Oh look, they are from Portugal".
Gondwanaland!In North America it seems that no one knows the difference between Africa and South America.![]()
Please say this was a toddler...Heard four misidentifications at the zoo today, all made me laugh:
Gray Wolf = horsie
Asian Black Bear = big black pig
Cougar = cheetah
American Bison = big puppy
Big puppy and horsie were. Not the other two.Please say this was a toddler...
How often do you think people misname things in museums, botanical gardens and art galleries?I have once heard a child call a tapir a shark and the parents nodded and said yes that's true....
Not in a zoo but similar. In fourth grade, my teacher showed me a book that had been made by a previous class. Each student in this class had to make a report on an animal native to Wisconsin and draw a picture of it. I flipped through and found a report on Mudpuppies that said: "The mudpuppy is a lizard that lives underwater".
How often do you think people misname things in museums, botanical gardens and art galleries?
I'll let you on about a little secret: sometimes, as a parent, when you're really, really tired, when your child is cranky or when your thoughts are somewhere else, you just nod to the nonsense it utters and carry on, for the sake of peace.
Some parents are indeed ignorant and cannot tell the difference between a shark and a tapir. Or a Rubens and a Van Gogh, an Etruscan and a Mayan vase or a sequoia and a ginkgo tree.
Yet ranting about it online on a zoo fan forum won't change a thing. However, if it makes you feel better, so be it.
It’s not irritating, but often guests, including foreign tourists, skip over or squander their opportunity to see animals that are rare in captivity. I think zoos and aquariums need to advertise better online and in the parks themselves if they are the only holders of something.
I totally agree with you, but it can be quite hard sometimes. For example, not many people would be interested if the Rosamond Gifford Zoo advertised that "we have the only white winged vampire bat!" just because it's too obscure and not many people are interested in what would sound like a vampire bat with white wings. But hey, I'm not the average zoo visitor.It’s not irritating, but often guests, including foreign tourists, skip over or squander their opportunity to see animals that are rare in captivity. I think zoos and aquariums need to advertise better online and in the parks themselves if they are the only holders of something.