Edmonton's Valley Zoo has a relatively tiny collection of animals, including a solitary elephant that must love the frigid winter weather that is the norm for a significant portion of the year. I spent the first ten years of my life living in Edmonton and can remember two consecutive years in the 1980's where there was 7-8 months with snow on the ground. The gibbon exhibit is one of the smallest I've ever seen for the species, and the three aging sea lions have the tiniest pool imaginable. There are zoos in SE Asia that are fantastic compared to those two enclosures. Lack of funding has hampered any kind of plans that the zoo has made, and they have had to alter their official "master plan" many times over the years.
Not long ago they announced on their website that they would focus exclusively on cold-weather animals, while still maintaining a "warm heart" that would have tropical animals in the centre of the zoo. I would be amazed if the Valley Zoo does gain funding for a polar bear exhibit, as in reality the place should really be torn down. The animals could be dispersed to many of the 220 AZA accredited zoos in North America, and the public would be saved from viewing a sad-sack collection.
As far as ZooCheck Canada is concerned, Taccachantrieri has a good point about their haphazard campaigns. I'm convinced that their opposition to the Calgary Zoo's proposed Arctic/Antarctic exhibit was a key factor in dropping beluga whales from the plans. And the fact that the Vancouver Aquarium is spending $80 million and almost doubling in size (while adding more whales and dolphins) has largely gone unnoticed. My only guess is that ZooCheck rarely updates their website, and being a small organization they have to pick and choose their campaigns. When the Calgary Zoo had polar bears in the past the bears were infamously stereotypical and at one time were regular users of prozac to calm them down.
Not long ago they announced on their website that they would focus exclusively on cold-weather animals, while still maintaining a "warm heart" that would have tropical animals in the centre of the zoo. I would be amazed if the Valley Zoo does gain funding for a polar bear exhibit, as in reality the place should really be torn down. The animals could be dispersed to many of the 220 AZA accredited zoos in North America, and the public would be saved from viewing a sad-sack collection.
As far as ZooCheck Canada is concerned, Taccachantrieri has a good point about their haphazard campaigns. I'm convinced that their opposition to the Calgary Zoo's proposed Arctic/Antarctic exhibit was a key factor in dropping beluga whales from the plans. And the fact that the Vancouver Aquarium is spending $80 million and almost doubling in size (while adding more whales and dolphins) has largely gone unnoticed. My only guess is that ZooCheck rarely updates their website, and being a small organization they have to pick and choose their campaigns. When the Calgary Zoo had polar bears in the past the bears were infamously stereotypical and at one time were regular users of prozac to calm them down.