Instead, the zoo emphasizes education, close and personal encounters with animals (where possible), and exhibiting species in such a way, so as to facilitate experiencing the zoo's creatures in their natural behaviors and in as natural surrounds as possible. The goal is to foster an appreciation, as well as concern for wild animals. The zoo does this with Masoala, with their breeding colony of white storks spread throughout the zoo, with the free roaming peacocks, with the emu walk-through, the diverse bird collection in the exotarium, as well as, notably, with its free-flight hall, with the penguin parade, the Selenga wetland parkscape, the parakeet aviary (with occasional opportunities for supervised feeding), as well as to a lesser degree with multiple, mostly generously sized aviaries dotted around the zoo and/or birds integrated into multi-species enclosures/developments such as Pantanal or Semien. This is not to say all birds at Zurich are excellently exhibited and at the cutting edge of innovation. Notably, since Masoala, the zoo's new developments have been predominantly mammal focused (Australia being the exception). The absence of free flying birds in the elephant house (though wild sparrows have in the meantime filled this gap), the Australia house, and, presumably, also in the soon to open giraffe and rhino house, are imo a missed opportunity - especially considering the zoo did precisely this successfully for decades in the old Africa, now Australia, house. But I do feel, also for birds, there is a clear emphasis on creating diverse, educational, and touching experiences for visitors that runs throughout the zoo. The zoo for example, has no less than five no-barrier bird experiences (Masoala, Exotarium free flight hall, Australia walk-through, parakeet aviary, Selenga), six if you count the free-roaming peafowl, and yet another walk-through aviary is due to open this Easter.