Lucas Lang
Well-Known Member
As for me I would say fish is so hard to identify especially if you have learnt a lot of knowledge of identify many species that may only have difference on their scale number for exam, which is very sad.
odd, I can't even find an entry for it on ZTLIn November 2013.
Not that unusual for an obscure freshwater fish; zootierliste remains largely unreliable for fish, especially at larger collections, for a lot of the reasons mentioned in this thread.odd, I can't even find an entry for it on ZTL
I'm sorry, what?This, but with birds.
Although I guess the general public does view birds in zoos the same way they view fish- pretty to look at with lots of bright colors, often kept in large, mixed-species exhibits, but with no regards to specific species except for the most popular (e.g. sharks and clownfish for fish, but for birds penguins and raptors). I can certainly see where the comparison is coming from, although I agree on this site birds are popular and get a lot of attention.I'm sorry, what?
Birds are easily the second most common animal group in zoos, are usually signed correctly (except in some large areas) and are not being ignored by pretty much any ZooChatter other than Giant Eland.
I'm sorry, what?
Birds are easily the second most common animal group in zoos, are usually signed correctly (except in some large areas) and are not being ignored by pretty much any ZooChatter other than Giant Eland.
Perhaps, but I guarantee there's much more interest than fish.Don't get me wrong, I love birds as much as the next ZooChatter.
I'm not as confident in the general public's ability or desire to differentiate different bird species; especially with comments I've heard at the zoo such as: "Birds are boring."
I'm not as confident in the general public's ability or desire to differentiate different bird species; especially with comments I've heard at the zoo such as: "Birds are boring."
I disagree - most people will still recognize numerous groups of birds readily enough. Swan, duck, parrot, eagle/hawk, ostrich/emu, pheasant, pigeon, toucan, crane/heron, penguin, pelican, etc. I've found the public to be much closer in IDing at least the right group for birds than fish, no contest. I've generally been far more surprised in people knowing birds, but they're also all over the place and birdwatching is steadily rising in popularity still.
Really? I would expect a fish this is swimming to be doing a more "engaging activity" than a lion that is sleeping, and yet lions are one of the most popular zoo animals.Comparatively speaking, their activities are simply not really as engaging for zoo visitors as much as mammals.
Really? I would expect a fish this is swimming to be doing a more "engaging activity" than a lion that is sleeping, and yet lions are one of the most popular zoo animals.
Behavior is always an interesting one, as it does impact the popularity of some animals (e.g. meerkats, otters, primates), there are other animals that live predominately sedentary lifestyles that remain popular as well (e.g. big cats, crocodilians, red panda) While behavior may certainly be one piece of the puzzle for zoo animal popularity, its certainly not the whole picture, as there are some unpopular species with really interesting behaviors and some popular species that are sedentary.
3) It seems like zoo and aquarium management themselves tend to shaft fish, either because they think guests don’t care, or because they don’t want to do the research. I’ve seen so many hippo/croc ponds and display tanks full of random, hybrid, and morph Malawi mbunas. Also abundant are koi, goldfish, freshwater angelfish morphs, balloon rams, and blood parrot cichlids, which almost never get labeled. These are places that wouldn’t display a white tiger, but they’ll display aquarium fish that wouldn’t exist in nature.
I feel an aspect of this is that very few people are interested in an individual fish. People enjoy seeing fish in schools, in large tunnels, in colorful reefs, groups of cichlids without knowing what they are. They are more attractive as a sum than individual parts; which is why massive open ocean galleries, large reef exhibits, and shark tunnels are three of the most popular sorts of of aquarium habitats. Even sharks, which people may have some familiarity with and may be able to name a few species, are often held in multispecies tanks. The individual fish means very little in all of this.
My thought is that this is because there is much less interest in fish behavior; it is much more difficult to anthropomorphize fish behavior as you can with mammals, birds and even reptiles -- to the average person, they swim, they swim, sometimes they eat, and they swim some more. While I am sure many zoochatters can describe more complex and interesting behavior, I can think of very little that the average person may be aware of. This contrasts how casual visitors often want to see a lion roar, see a monkey swing. see a kangaroo hop.
The prevalence of such beautiful multispecies exhibits also makes it harder to focus on the unique traits of individual species. Signage that tells you the name of a fish and where it live is often the best you can hope for, in comparison to mammal exhibits that may sometimes have several signs explaining different behaviors or adaptions in detail. When you have two dozen species of fish you cannot dedicate that level of detail to every species contained.
It is unfortunate, I often wish I was better educated about fish.
You don't have to go that far, here in the US we have the hogchoker (Trinectes maculatus), a small flatfish, about the size of the palm of a grown man's hand, that is amphidromous (can freely move between saltwater and freshwater, and not just to breed). I've caught them in a small creek in west Houston that is a tributary of Buffalo Bayou, over 30 miles inland from where the bayou enters Burnet Bay, which isn't a very salty bay, only about 7 to 13 ppt (normal seawater is about 38 ppt)I was shocked to learn on my most recent trip to Shedd that there are freshwater flatfish - like the Peruvian Freshwater Sole.
I knew about the Hogchoker, but I had no idea there were fully freshwater species.You don't have to go that far, here in the US we have the hogchoker (Trinectes maculatus), a small flatfish, about the size of the palm of a grown man's hand, that is amphidromous (can freely move between saltwater and freshwater, and not just to breed). I've caught them in a small creek in west Houston that is a tributary of Buffalo Bayou, over 30 miles inland from where the bayou enters Burnet Bay, which isn't a very salty bay, only about 7 to 13 ppt (normal seawater is about 38 ppt)