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Zoos Animals and Animal Rights

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Zoos Animals and Animal Rights

帖子admin » 周四 8月 11, 2016 11:43 pm

The greatest threat to people is ignorance.
The greatest threat to animals is ignorant people.
http://www.animalethics.org.uk/zoos.html

When you think of a zoo you might picture one of the few prestigious zoo institutions. But most zoos are small insignificant collections in towns or situated by roadsides or in people's private backyards. A 'zoo' is simply a collection of animals. Most zoos are geared to make money by attracting paying visitors. They give no or trivial thought to animal rights or welfare. The quality of life for their animals varies from lethal to scarcely adequate.

The earliest significant animal collections date back at least 3,500 years to the Middle East. The animals came from faraway places and were objects of curiosity. The animals were given to rulers, the rich and the powerful in return for political favours and the animals' new owners used their collections as displays of status.

Enthusiasts with a passion for collecting animals started the first big zoos as we know them today. Zoos exist for status and to make money. They trapped animals from the wild and sometimes killed mother animals to take their young. Young animals are easier to keep and transport because they eat less, take up little room and are more manageable than adults. The animal catchers killed animals who got in their way and many of the animals they trapped died on the long and hard journey to the zoo.

There is a zoo in nearly all large cities today and the bigger the zoo the prouder the citizens. Among the first major city zoos were Vienna, founded in 1752, and Paris, founded about 40 years later. London Zoo, founded in 1828, claims to be the world's first zoo for the study of animals. Later in the nineteenth century Philadelphia and Adelaide zoos were set up in the US and Australia.

Lion king of beasts

Zoo Statistics
Over 10,000 zoos exist worldwide, holding about a million vertebrate animals.

The number of animals per zoo ranges from a handful to several thousand.

Over 600 million people a year visit zoos.

These figures (from Guide to the World Zoo Conservation Strategy) no doubt exclude animals from the innumerable small roadside tourist stops and small private collections. Some sources claim there are more like five million vertebrate animals in zoos.

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Changing Attitude to Zoos
In living memory the collectors of zoo animals treated their charges as items or specimens, especially treasured if rare or unusual, and prized as public attractions. The animals themselves typically lived in small bare cages with nothing to do and no place to retreat from human gaze or disturbance.

Leading and distinguished zoos set a trend from the 1950's as popular attractions to entertain the mass public. However, in the 1970's people's attitudes really started changing. A few people began expounding the view that animals have mental and physical needs that their inadequate living conditions cannot support. One charity, Zoo Check, was especially prominent. Zoo critics challenged the role of zoos making zoo animal welfare an issue and consequently zoos were forced to justify their existence to the public.

Lion king of beasts

Basic Arguments for Zoos
Zoos justify their existence in four ways:

1. Scientific Research
Zoos contribute substantially to scientific knowledge by researching animals living at the zoo.

2. Nature Conservation
Zoos play a key role saving species from extinction by breeding endangered animals and returning them to the wild.

3. Public Education
Zoo exhibits are a valuable source for the public to learn about animals and their natural habitat.

4. Public Entertainment
Zoos offer entertainment and recreation for the public. Zoos cannot rely entirely on grants and public donations, so they must earn their way and charge fees like any other business.

So what arguments do zoo critics muster against these assertions?

Lion king of beasts

Arguments Against Zoos


1. Scientific Research
Few zoos finance research that may benefit their animal occupants and by far the majority of zoos have neither the means nor the will to carry out research.

Nor is research necessarily always significant and worthwhile in the few zoos that do it and can be misleading. For example, zoo animals make unreliable subjects for behavioural research. Their living conditions are artificial and many zoo animals are mentally deranged (more below). We now know from field studies on wild-living animals, like wolves and chimpanzees, that the social organisation of animals in the wild where humans do not disturb them are completely different from their zoo counterparts.

2. Nature Conservation
The vast majority of zoos have no desire or resources to be effective means for conservation. It is only the very few leading zoos or ones with conservation-minded owners that pay tribute to nature conservation.

Zoos have reintroduced successfully only a handful of animals back to the wild. Notable successes are the golden lion tamarin to the rain forest in Brazil, the Arabian oryx to the deserts of Arabia, the tarpan (Przewalski horse) to the Mongolian steppes and the field cricket to Britain. But these exceptions, although important, do not justify the captivity of a million other animals at zoos. In fact, removing rare animals from the wild to stock zoos can influence the survival of the animals' wild population. The major zoos today breed most of their animals from existing zoo-held animals but still occasionally take animals from the wild and there is a highly damaging trade to nature conservation in wild animals for smaller animal collections and for private zoos.

Some zoo animal species, such as the charismatic crowd-pulling ones like pandas, chimpanzees and snow leopards, are in danger of extinction, but most species in most zoos are not pending extinction. The purpose of many of zoo animals, especially the large ones like African lions, elephants and giraffes, is to acquire money at the gate from paying visitors. Zoos breed cute baby animals for the same reason, too pull in crowds, but then have a surplus of animals once they are grown-up and must get rid of them.

Even if a zoo wants to return animals to their wild environment, it is not always possible to do so because people destroy or seriously degrade natural habitats. Few zoos support in situ conservation projects, yet the priority for conservation should be to conserve animals in their natural habitat. There is no space or money in zoos to accommodate and look after even a tiny fraction of the many and growing numbers of endangered species. Nor is there any certainty that animals in zoos will breed successfully, survive debilitation from lack of genetic variety, or resist extinction from infectious diseases.

3. Public Education
Throngs of people visit zoos. So the potential is there to educate people about animals, their rights, welfare and conservation. Some zoos fix up information plaques or recorded talks next to exhibits, and a few of the big zoos supply videos and publications. However, even at the small number of zoos where good educational material is available, the public absorb little of it and most zoo-goers disregard it.

Zoo animals cannot possibly act genuinely in their enclosures and may even be psychotic (more below). Unnaturally housed or insane animals cannot be representative of their species. The zoo-going public learn only what cowed, mad or withdrawn animals are like and that it is normal and acceptable that humans should control animals.

4. Public Entertainment
There were virtually no televisions in the 1950's when people flocked to the big zoos, but good wildlife television programmes today can show normal behaviour of animals in their natural surrounds. And many people today go on safari or working holidays in wild animal habitat to experience nature in the flesh. We do not need to confine animals in zoos to lean about them or be entertained by them. Zoo animals are not necessary as educators or entertainers of the public.

Conclusion
What do zoos really teach people? Zoos teach people at least three things:

1. It is all right to keep animals locked up so long as we can justify it with an excuse ('we need zoo animals for conservation / research / public education / making money').

2. Animals exist for humans and not as individuals who manage their own lives.

3. Humans are superior to animals because we can control them.

Chinese zoo onlooks watch two lions killing a cow.
Onlookers are entertained at a Chinese zoo as a cow fights for her life trying to throw off two lions. Photo: Asian Animal Protection Network.

Morality of Zoos

Zoo animals live in conditions where outlets for their natural instincts are continually frustrated. Lack of adequate environment is not a mental or emotional problem for invertebrates, like giant stag beetles and tarantula spiders. But it is a serious problem for animals like wolves, bears and eagles. How can animals who normally run or fly great distances express their urges when confined?

Animals in zoo usually have nothing to do. They have no tasks to exercise their intelligence or other skills. Animals can be bored, depressed and listless. In short, zoo animals become institutionalised, helplessly dependent on humans.

In their restricted zoo-world many animals succumb to ailing mental health and go mad. It is easy to see animals with unnatural behaviour in zoos. You can see self-mutilation, such as tail chewing or excessive plucking out of fur or feathers, see listless indifference, and see abnormal repetitive behaviours (stereotypies) like pacing up and down or rocking back and forth for ages. Some animals go crazy in zoos. These behaviours indicate neurosis or insanity brought on by boredom, deprivation, frustration and stress. The animals are telling us they are suffering from inadequate lives - even though they may look physically healthy, well fed, clean and otherwise cared for. Humans in mental homes express the same kind of behaviour, but mental health problems in zoo animals usually go unnoticed by the passing public.

Animals go mad in zoos.
Click to go to silhouettes.


Zoos encourage the (often illegal) trade in animals and endangered species through stocking zoos with wild-caught animals.

Where do old and surplus zoo animals go? For some zoos the temptation is to sell animals they do not want to practices like the exotic meat industry, such as bushmeat or canned hunts.

Animals in zoos in war zones may stave slowly to death in their cages through neglect because no one can care for them. Deliberately condemning animals to death like this is outrageous neglect and an abandonment of moral consideration.

Locking up animals encourages indifference and lack of respect for animal life. Zoos teach people that it is all right to use animals, even for purposes we assume are virtuous (education and conservation). Zoos inspire people with false ideas by inadvertently teaching them that humans are superior to animals, physically dominant over them, and that it is proper to live apart from nature, not as part of it.

All in all, humans use zoo animals as a dubious means to further human ends, in particular for the conservation of species for human posterity, research for human knowledge, education for human betterment, and for the pursuit of earning a living. Conservation, research, education and employment are noble ideals, but if you believe that animals should have rights then zoos are a raw deal.

Lion king of beasts

For & Against: argue your case

1. Research
Claim: Zoos contribute valuable knowledge and expertise to our understanding of wildlife and to the needs of wildlife through their research on animals.

Claim: Research on abnormally disturbed animals kept in barren conditions can only provide reliable information on abnormally disturbed animals kept in barren conditions. The best place to study wildlife is in the wild.

2. Breeding Species
Claim: Zoos support conservation of endangered populations. They breed these animals so they can return their offspring to the wild.

Claim: Only a tiny number of zoos breed animals effectively for conservation and release extremely few animals to the wild. This does not justify the captivity of millions of animals.

3. Life Quality vs Sanity
Claim: Zoo animals live healthy lives in elaborate enclosures and fulfil their natural behaviours. We feed them good diets and dedicated staff look after them.

Claim: Zoos drive many animals into aberrant behaviour and insanity, even in the better zoos.

4. Longevity
Claim: Zoos protect animals by keeping them safe, so they live longer than animals in the wild.

Claim: Zoos may protect animals but they have a poorer quality of life in confinement and longevity is not a guide to good mental health.

5. Stewardship
Claim: People have severely degraded of destroyed the environment of many species. So the only hope of survival for many wild animals is in zoos and captive breeding centres.

Claim: All the zoos in the world cannot keep a large enough number of animals with sufficient genetic variation to save endangered species from going extinct. The only way to save species is to preserve them in the wild with their natural habitat.

6. Taking Wild Animals
Claim: It is wrong for zoos or their agents to capture animals from the wild, kill their parents to get them, and destroy their communities.

Claim: That is largely in the past, for reputable zoos at least. Animals collected from the wild today are for specific conservation and educational purposes.

7. Education
Claim: Visitors to zoos are interested in learning about the animals they see and are therefore receptive to education. Zoos offer lots of educational material about their animals and nature.

Claim: If they bother to provide anything, zoos display the most meagre information about their animals. Most visitors drift from one group of animals to another without leaning anything about them.

8. Creating Awareness
Claim: Zoos stimulate public interest in animals and their conservation by leading campaigns to save animals and by presenting exhibits to the public to get their conservation message across.

Claim: Many organisations effectively stimulate public interest in animals and their conservation without imprisoning animals. Local nature trusts and the World Wildlife Fund are examples.

9. Zoos vs TV
Claim: You can understand animals better from TV films taken in the animals' natural surroundings without having to confine animals.

Claim: You can see and experience animals at zoos that you would have no other opportunity to meet. Television does not allow you to get close to live animals or smell them.

10. Surplus Animals
Claim: Zoos destroy surplus animals or send them to disreputable traders for base purposes, like canned hunts.

Claim: Reputable zoos send surplus animals to other responsible zoos and institutions. They practice birth control or regulate population size in some other suitable manner.

11. Money-pullers
Claim: Many zoo species are not in danger of extinction so have no conservation value. Zoos use these animals merely to attract the paying public. These animal should not be in zoos.

Claim: Zoos must attract visitors for revenue so that zoos can carry out their research, conservation and education. These animals can double a zoo's income.

12. Business
Claim: Zoos exist to make a profit. The money goes to the zoo's owner or investors. There is no justification for zoos.

Claim: Zoos must make a profit if they are to run successfully and the best zoos invest in the welfare of their animal stock.
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Re: Zoos Animals and Animal Rights

帖子admin » 周四 8月 11, 2016 11:46 pm

http://en.allexperts.com/q/Wild-Animals ... s-open.htm
Expert: Jonathan Wright - 10/23/2010

Question
What are the advantages and disadvantages of metropolitan/tradional zoos compared to open-plain parks?

Answer
Dear Lynda

Thank you for your question. I also wish to thank the authors of the websites I used.

The open-plains parks tend to have more space for animal enclosures and this can lead to animals living in large groups, rather than singly or in pairs, which can still occur in some traditional zoos. There is also the possibility of having large, mixed species exhibits, so that different species can interact. Exhibits can also be enhanced with natural vegetation. Please note that several traditional zoos have mixed species exhibits, but often haven’t got enough space to make really big exhibits. The downside is that inclement weather may mean that animals can shelter some distance away from the visitors, so a day at an open-plain park may consist of trying to see an animal, rather than learning about how animals behave etc. Some overgrown zoo enclosures can have the same problem, but visitors should understand that some animals do not like being looked at and may not breed if placed in a relatively bare enclosure.

As regards veterinary care, it is probably easier to provide this for an animal in a small enclosure than for an animal in a large, mixed enclosure.

Traditional zoos can have a range of enclosures of different sizes, according to the size of the animals being displayed. This means that a zoo could have displays of ants as well as elephants. While an enclosure in an open-plan park could contain millions of ants and other small animals, visitors would be unlikely to see them unless they were moving along the barriers to the enclosure. This tends to indicate that zoos are better for visitors to see small animals, while open-plain parks are better for seeing large animals, especially those kept in groups. I have seen large animals in very small enclosures and several large animals may suffer mental health problems due to being kept by themselves in small, concrete enclosures and many zoos are moving away from this kind of environment for their animals.

While many zoos are moving away from barred cages, open-plain parks tend to have more natural looking environments for grasslands species. Traditional zoos are better for showing a variety of species, especially small ones.

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_d ... dlife_sa... gives some useful information.

All the best

Jonathan
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