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Dear Dr Wedderburn,

The attached article is not exactly Asian but I think it is

relevant. In my opinion, David Hancocks was the most progressive zoo director

of the Western world. He defied the American Zoo Association on several

occasions(one of them being an application to capture and tag Killer Whales) and

was a consultant to the Born Free Foundation. I also know that he has had

occasion to interact with Mr Laidlaw. He supported closing London Zoo. The zoos

he managed, Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum and

Werribee Zoo in Australia were among the very best in the world(I think you've

been to Woodland Park). His book on zoos, 'A DIFFERENT NATURE'(University Of

California Press) is excellent and highly recommended for anyone interested in

animals.

Best wishes and kind regards,

 

Yours sincerely,

ghosh 

 

Bamboo should be sent to a place where she can heal

Full story:

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2002481819_hancocks09.html

 

By David Hancocks

Special to The Times

 

 

 

Usually, zoos seek publicity for major events, such as the arrival of a new

elephant. But late last month, an Asian elephant named Bamboo was transported

without fanfare from Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo to Point Defiance Zoo in

Tacoma. It was a sad final chapter in a tragic story.

 

The history of elephants in zoos is full of mental and physical pain. Wild

elephants, astonishingly intelligent, perceptive and complex beings, live in

caring and secure extended families that stay intact for life. But zoo elephants

have traditionally been lonely, shipped around indiscriminately, bored, cramped,

chained and beaten.

 

In the wild they enjoy an incredibly positive and loving social environment.

Different attitudes prevail in many zoos, where dominance and control are

paramount, even for babies. Seattle's baby elephant Hansa was struck with a

metal barb-tipped steel weapon, the ankus, at least 11 times in one week in

2001.

 

Later, at 18 months, Hansa was beaten more severely for eating dirt. When this

became public, the zoo's deputy director, Bruce Bohmke, was quoted as saying the

blows were " appropriate. " Elephant mothers would never reprimand a baby for

eating dirt.

 

Zoos claim dominance is both traditional and necessary. They also claim that

wild elephants use strong discipline on their young. This is false. Dr. Joyce

Poole, director of the Amboseli Elephant Research Project, has learned in

25-plus years of observing wild elephants that they do not use discipline on

their young. She says, " I have no idea how this myth started. I have never seen

(wild) calves disciplined. Protected, comforted, cooed over, reassured and

rescued, yes, but punished, no. "

 

When I worked at Woodland Park Zoo, from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s, Bamboo

was a teenager but nonetheless cooperative, trustworthy, smart and playful. Her

housing conditions were appalling: a drafty, leaky, uninsulated building, but we

did all we could for her well-being. We abolished chaining the elephants through

the night. We dedicated extra keeper time, introduced enrichment techniques to

occupy the elephants mentally and physically, and even used the entire park as

Bamboo's playground.

 

I recall one summer afternoon when there was concern because Bamboo and her

keeper had not been seen for some time. We found them lying in a sunny glade,

down by Aurora Avenue North, each fast asleep, the keeper propped against her

comfortable girth.

 

After I left the zoo, frustrated by the city's failure to invest in better

housing for the elephants, changes were made. Overnight chaining was

reintroduced. Discipline became harsh. Strong control was substituted for a

system that had relied upon cooperation and love.

 

Bamboo today is deeply changed from what she used to be. This gentle and docile

elephant is now branded as dangerous and has been sent to a zoo that specializes

in " difficult " elephants.

 

It does seem that Point Defiance Zoo has a better management program than

Woodland Park's, and I am confident they will give her good care. But there is a

much better option.

 

Bamboo needs not just good care, but a place where she can heal. She has been

offered the chance, at no cost, to live in The Elephant Sanctuary in Hohenwald,

Tenn. There, she would have vast spaces to explore (hundreds of acres instead of

just one acre at Point Defiance -- and, despite what zoo officials say,

elephants do need lots of space), plus the company of not just two but many

other broken and now mended and contented elephants.

 

The quality of life at the Tennessee sanctuary, the abundance of love the

elephants receive, and the joy they experience are beyond anything I have seen

at any zoo. It seems an obvious choice. But it would take a bit of courage: The

American Zoo Association has threatened member zoos with expulsion for sending

elephants to a sanctuary.

 

Seattle's zoo still owns Bamboo, and thus is responsible for her. It should make

a compassionate decision, and do only what is best for her. Give Bamboo the

reward she deserves. Package her up in a bundle of love; smother her with

affection for one final farewell. Then send her as soon as possible to a

sanctuary filled with happiness.David Hancocks was design coordinator and then

director of Woodland Park Zoo from 1974 to 1984. He also served as director of

the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum in Tucson from 1989 to 1997, and was director

of the Werribee Open Range Zoo in Australia, from 1998 to 2003. He lives in

Melbourne, Australia.

 

 

 

301 pages, 6 x 9 inches, 37 b/w photographs, 1 line illustration

Published May 2001

Available worldwide

http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/8850.html

 

 

 

Entire Site Books Journals E-Editions The Press

 

David Hancocks

A Different Nature

The Paradoxical World of Zoos and Their Uncertain Future

 

 

 

$21.95, £13.95 0-520-23676-9

In stock--ships in 2-3 days

 

Categories: Ecology, Evolution, Environment; Conservation; History of Science;

Animal Behavior

 

 

 

 

Ecology, Evolution, Environment

Conservation

History of Science

 

 

MORE INFO AND CHOICES

 

Email:

 

 

 

Read the Preface

Description | Table of Contents | Awards | About the Author | Links

 

 

" Brilliant. Its clear and unpretentious language and Hancocks' evident passion

for and knowledge of his subject made it one of the best books I have read in a

long while. " --Tim Murray, The Age (Melbourne)

" This brilliantly researched and persuasive book traces the sociology of animal

captivity back to Paleolithic times. " --Publishers Weekly

 

" The capture and display of wild animals, an ancient and universal phenomenon,

embodies a dichotomy, Hancocks explains in this engrossing history of zoos and

their role in society. His critique of the miseries associated with their

museumlike warehousing of living creatures is electrifying, the perfect lead-in

to his discussion of the slow realization that naturalistic habitats are

essential to zoo animals' health and happiness. " --Booklist

 

" [Hancocks] writes authoritatively and compassionately, and fortunately offers

some ideas on how to improve zoos for both the animals and the people who visit

them. " --Christian Science Monitor

 

" [Hancocks] writes with impressive scholarly authority, and in a lucid style

that when necessary rises to feeling and eloquence. Although the book is only

266 pages in length, it feels much longer because it includes so much

interesting fact and so many lively opinions. " --Washington Times

 

" [Hancocks] makes his case with convincing passion and unusually elegant prose.

Given that declining biodiversity is probably the greatest of all the

environmental challenges we face, Hancocks' book has a special urgency. This is

not just a cry for the wild, but a call to arms. " --LA Weekly

 

" An engaging tour through the history of the world's zoological parks, from the

16th-century zoos of the Mogul Empire to the Bronx Zoo of today. [Hancocks]

forces us to consider the worth and purpose of zoos in modern society from an

animal welfare and conservation perspective. " --American Scientist

 

" Excellent survey. " --BBC Wildlife

 

" Fascinating, often eloquent . . . deeply informed. " --Seattle Weekly

 

" [F]izzes and crackles with perception and provocation. " --Science

 

" [A] brilliant, disturbing, and hopeful history not just of zoos but of human

relations with nature. " --Landscape Architecture

 

 

" A well-written and provocative, opinion-rich account of zoos, their history,

and their goals and purposes. Hancocks has earned the right to speak

authoritatively about these subjects, thanks to his tenure as director of two

leading U. S. zoos. This book will appeal to general readers and to all persons

interested in zoos and their role in conservation and education. " --John Alcock,

author of Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach

" Giraffes, elephants, gorillas, snakes, and toucans respond poorly to the usual

conventions of human architecture. Zoo architects usually respond no less poorly

to the needs of animals. David Hancocks draws on a lifetime's experience working

as a zoo director and zoo architect to explore this dilemma, and offers a

compelling vision for the future. This is an important book for those interested

in conservation as well as for zoo and museum buffs. " --William Conway, former

President and General Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society and the

Bronx Zoo

 

" For over two decades David Hancocks has fervently tried to reform the

fundamental character and mission of zoos. This book is his most thorough

analysis of what is wrong with them and his most detailed and compelling plea

for improvement. Every conscientious zoo administrator, curator, and keeper

should read it from cover to cover with an open mind. Professionals in botanical

gardens, museums, and nature parks should also consider this treatise because

Hancocks advocates that a fusion of all of these institutions into a new entity

better positioned to interpret the entire biosphere. " -Mark A. Dimmitt, Director

of Natural History, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

 

 

DESCRIPTION (back to top)

 

Humanity has had an enduring desire for close contact with exotic animals--from

the Egyptian kings who kept thousands of animals, including monkeys, wild cats,

hyenas, giraffes, and oryx, to the enormously popular zoological parks of today.

This book, the most extensive history of zoos yet published, is a fascinating

look at the origins, evolution, and--most importantly--the future of zoos.

 

David Hancocks, an architect and zoo director for thirty years, is passionately

opposed to the poor standards that have prevailed and still exist in many zoos.

He reviews the history of zoos in light of their failures and successes and

points the way toward a more humane approach, one that will benefit both the

animals and the humans who visit them. This book, replete with illustrations and

full of moving stories about wild animals in captivity, shows that we have only

just begun to realize zoos' enormous potential for good.

 

Hancocks singles out and discusses the better zoos, exploring such places as the

Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, the Bronx Zoo with its dedication to worldwide

conservation programs, Emmen Zoo in Holland with its astonishingly diverse

education programs, Wildscreen in England, and Seattle's Woodland Park Zoo,

where the concept of " landscape immersion " --exhibits that surround people and

animals in carefully replicated natural habitats--was pioneered.

 

Calling for us to reinvent zoos, Hancocks advocates the creation of a new type

of institution: one that reveals the interconnections among all living things

and celebrates their beauty, inspires us to develop greater compassion for wild

animals great and small, and elicits our support for preserving their wild

habitats.

 

CONTENTS (back to top)

 

List of Illustrations

Preface

Acknowledgments

1. Collections as Status

2. The Eighteenth-Century Concept

3. The Nineteenth-Century Phenomenon

4. Romanticists and Modernists

5. Toward New Frontiers

6. Immersed in the Landscape

7. Agents of Conservation

8. Which Way the Future?

Epilogue

Bibliography

Illustration Credits

Index

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR (back to top)

David Hancocks lives in Melbourne, Australia. He is Director of the Open Range

Zoo, at Werribee, and Director of Planning for the Zoological Parks and Gardens

Board, Victoria, Australia. He is author of Animals and Architecture (1971) and

Master Builders of the Animal World (1973).

 

AWARDS (back to top)

Finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award in the Science and Technology

Category, Los Angeles Times

 

RELATED WEB SITES (back to top)

Read a review at the Christian Science Monitor

 

Subsidiary Rights Contact

Translation rights: The Spieler Agency (New York)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All Books Journals E-Editions The Press

 

 

 

 

David Hancocks

A Different Nature

The Parodoxical World of Zoos and Their Uncertain Future

GENERAL ENDOWMENT

 

--

 

Back to description

 

 

Preface

 

Growing up in the Welsh border country, in a world in which television existed

but was unheard of by me, I could safely explore ancient oak woodlands,

heathlands and marshes and quiet narrow lanes, searching the internet of the

more than seven hundred thousand miles of Britain's hedgerows, thick with

wildflowers, that existed half a century ago. There were things to find in any

season, familiar and rare: always rabbits, often a hedgehog snuffling for slugs,

occasionally a bank vole or wood mouse, sometimes the soft blue eggs of a robin

nestled in a cup of grasses in the deep shade of a hedge, their clarity of form

and perfect smoothness contrasting with the tangled shelter of hawthorn and

hazel. In springtime, there were newts with fire-red bellies and the magic of

frog's spawn in clear shallow waters, lizards on dry-stone walls and grass

snakes under the summer bracken, red-admiral butterflies and yellow-banded

snails, exquisitely handsome, feeding on bramble bushes on misty autumn

afternoons. Once a year, on a trip to the seaside, I gathered seaweed, scrabbled

for sideways-scuttling crabs, and dared to place a finger inside the sea

anemones in the salty rock pools.

 

I had no knowledge of exotic creatures, not even the wolves and bears that once

roamed Britain. Each day, however, I did gain an object lesson in ecology. My

country-village home was an idyllic playground of fields and woodlands rich in

wildlife. The town where I went to school, just a few miles northeast, lay in a

region so blighted, so blanketed in industrial soot, it was called the Black

Country. It had been the birthplace of the world's Industrial Revolution and was

soured with chemical effluents and two centuries of grime and ash.

 

Once, the Black Country had been as green and as placid as any other part of

rural England, but then its farms, hamlets, and villages were replaced with

serried ranks of slum housing crammed into the gaps between iron mills, canals,

collieries, blast furnaces, slag heaps, and railway lines. Wildlife had been

extirpated, although rats, pigeons, thistles, sparrows, dandelions, and feral

cats were abundant. Trees and children were stunted by lack of sunlight. Rivers

and streams stank and steamed. The Black Country was, in microcosm, a harbinger

of what we have been doing to the world ever since the Industrial Revolution

quickened the pace of economic progress and introduced mass production and rapid

exhaustion of natural resources, measuring success only in terms of financial

profits. There was another omen, too. In the heart of the Black Country, a

melange of exotic beasts lived in the Dudley Zoo: tigers, elephants, seals,

baboons, monkeys, and bears, the jetsam of wild places from around the world

trapped inside a high-walled enclave surrounded by a blasted and blackened land.

I didn't go there as a child; I was a country kid. Zoos, like Dudley's factory

rats and street pigeons, are an essentially urban phenomenon.

 

It wasn't until I was a university student, studying architecture that I made a

visit to London Zoo. There I saw exotic creatures for the first time:

crocodiles, giraffes, mandrills, cassowaries, tropical fishes, and sea lions

made a special impact on me. I cannot recall what I was expecting from the zoo,

though I remember being curious and eager. I was not, however, anticipating the

shock of seeing a gorilla. It wasn't his huge form that astonished me so much as

the intelligence in his eyes. That, and the bitterly small size of his barren

cage. This extraordinary animal, with his regal air, survived in a space no

bigger than a garden shed. He was called Guy, and he sat on a concrete floor,

soiled with his own excrement, looking out through bars and a glass window at a

million people who shuffled past each year to gawk at him in his silent and

solitary confinement. I walked away from London Zoo that day, as I have many

others since, feeling confused and depressed.

 

It has been posited sometimes that if zoos did not exist, they would have to be

invented as places to save endangered species from extinction. Conversely, some

people believe that no animal should be kept captive for any reason and that all

zoos should be closed. Both of these extreme positions represent wishful

thinking. Zoos are not the best places for holding and breeding rare species.

Such an activity is better undertaken on large tracts of land where sufficient

numbers of animals can be maintained for best genetic control, away from people,

and in conditions conducive to their eventual release. As for abolishing zoos,

the very strong roots of zoos as cultural attractions in our society make their

forced closure an impossible goal. Sadly, even the worst examples of roadside

atrocities attract paying customers. The implication in each extremist view,

however, is correct: we should not accept zoos as they currently are.

 

My proposal is to uninvent zoos as we know them and to create a new type of

institution, one that praises wild things, that engenders respect for all

animals, and that interprets a holistic view of Nature. It is possible to create

captive situations in which wild animals can enjoy a life that is more

comfortable, healthier, safer, and longer than they typically have in the wild.

Moreover, though it is rarely achieved, we can present those animals in ways

that reflect the splendor and wonderment of the wild. With a few changes we can

design zoos that convey the richness of the natural world and that carry vital

messages about our need to love, care for, and protect its diversity. Now almost

totally separated from daily contact with Nature, people are quickly losing

awareness of the importance of sharing the planet with a multiformity of living

and essentially wild things. Zoos have the capacity to help us refocus our views

of wild animals and wild places. They can encourage a new understanding of

Nature.

 

But, sadly, when I lift images of zoos to mind, I find a jumble of unpleasant

sights and sounds. Bored animals in small and sterile spaces, popcorn and

ice-cream wrappers littering asphalt sidewalks, balloons, plastic snakes, panda

keychains, hot dogs, artificially flavored drinks, chain-link fences, trees made

of epoxy resin. I hear the echoes of clanging steel doors as lions and tigers

and bears are locked away for the night and the reverberating screams of

chimpanzees ricocheting off bare walls. I too easily find memories of small

birds in impoverished cages, snakes coiled on gravel, living in a green-painted

box with only a dish of water and a plastic vine, never able to stretch their

body's length. Images come too readily of dusty enclosures, littered with steel

feeding dishes, degraded with sawed-off tree stumps and rubber tires hanging on

chains, bounded with endless lumps of fake rock walls. Plants seem to be

relegated to the sidelines, except when gaudy splashes of color fill the

flowerbeds in the ubiquitous municipal style of landscaping. The intensity of

these semblances varies from place to place, but unintelligent design is

commonplace. A casual review of the new zoo exhibits published each month in the

design section of the American Zoo Association's newsletter, Communiqué, reveals

a depressing eagerness to show off examples the crudeness of which should

generate only embarrassment. All too often, zoos provide confused images of an

artificial world, with their disjointed exhibits, second-rate food services, and

wild animals held in ugly conditions unable to carry out the repertoire of their

natural behaviors. Too many zoos are clumsy monuments to mediocrity. They

enclose and confine the most exquisite masterpieces of evolutionary design in

ugly and sometimes ludicrous environments, displaying and dishonoring beautiful

creatures against backdrops of soiled brickwork and concrete.

 

But scattered among these memories are startling exceptions. The delight and

astonishment of being close enough to hear the soft whiffling of a snow leopard,

to watch the shuffling bulk of elephants rolling in a mud wallow, study a

weaverbird busily interlacing grasses into his spherical nest, marvel at the

crazy mating dance of cranes. I have seen groups of wild gazelles on the

savannas of Zambia only at a distance, but at a few good zoos, I have found

similar groups grazing on grassy plains and have gained extra pleasure from the

knowledge that the zoo gazelles are unaffected by the scourges of parasites and

will not suffer the agony of being chased down and eaten alive. On zoo visits I

have seen people shed their irrational fears and discover by touching a snake

for the first time that it is not slimy but smooth as silk and then come to

recognize it as a wondrous example of biological engineering. I recall the

delight in watching rehabilitated golden eagles soaring back into the skies

after months of careful nursing by zookeepers and veterinarians. The

surprisingly delicate slow-motion movements of hippos underwater, the deep

whirring of a hummingbird's wings, the mesmerizing ballet of jellyfish, the

flash of iridescent blue from the wings of a tropical butterfly that sat on my

arm--these are personal experiences I would never have enjoyed without visits to

a zoo. I have watched with pleasure as a docent convinced someone that

tarantulas are worth welcoming rather than squashing. These glimpses of evidence

that zoos can truly be places of wonder, bridges to paradise, sustain my often

sinking opinion and soften my ambivalence.

 

With such a dichotomy of experiences, however, I find zoos a terrible challenge.

They reveal the best and the worst in us and are stark portrayals of our

confused relationship with the other animals with which we share this planet. It

is illuminating, then, to examine our zoos, to untangle their muddled histories,

and to ask whether they remain relevant. After thirty years in zoo design and

management, I have formed some heretical opinions. Zoos are routinely justified

by the four pillars of recreation, research, conservation, and education. Are

these adequate?

 

The recreational aspect of zoos is surely suspect. Studies of zoo visitors have

repeatedly shown that a substantial number attend simply as a family day out.

Such indulgence is difficult to defend. Keeping wild animals in captivity

warrants stronger justification than the setting for a social gathering.

 

Research provides a more contentious thesis. The proximity of zoo animals allows

studies of their physiology and behaviors that would be dangerous and difficult

in the wild. Behavioral research in zoos is the dominant activity, but is

inherently problematic. The differences in their milieu make precarious any

extrapolations with or comparisons between the behaviors of animals in wild

habitats and those in zoos. And in any case, zoo staff rarely conduct research

in the wild. There are, moreover, few trained scientists at most zoos, and data

collection is usually for the purpose of solving captive-animal management

problems, rather than contributing to the scientific literature. The matter of

ethical research on zoo animals is also omnipresent. Invasive procedures are not

warranted. It would seem that veterinary studies leading to improved physical

care of the animals are the most valuable purpose for zoo research: which then

raises the question of why the research is needed in the first place.

 

Conservation, in the form of breeding programs for zoo animals, is also a rather

flimsy platform to support the continued existence of zoological parks. Fewer

than five species have been saved from extinction by zoos, and some of them more

by providence than prudence. Zoos are not, and for many reasons cannot be,

sanctuaries for saving the world's wildlife: they deal with too few species and

too little space for it.

 

This leaves education, which, in the original definition as a justification for

zoos, probably meant a pedagogical approach. Monkeys have traditionally been

represented in rows of cages, for example, so that people could make comparative

observations of the physical form of different species. It is within a wider

definition of education that the best and most viable reason for the continuing

existence of zoos can be found. They have enormous potential to shape public

opinion, to encourage sympathetic attitudes toward wildlife, and to educate the

public about ecology, evolution, and wild animals. Zoos can open windows to a

world of Nature that people could otherwise experience only via technology.

 

This potential role for zoos, however, is largely neglected. There is far more

lip service than there are quantifiable results, more cant than can do. Of the

millions of zoo visits that occur each year, few result in people exiting the

zoo with better understanding of the inhabitants or more willing to make changes

for the sake of wildlife. Indeed, some disturbing studies by Yale psychologist

Stephen Kellert and Julie Dunlap of the Humane Society of the United States

(1989) reveal that attitudes are more negative after a visit to some zoos. After

people see animals in cages or in zoo exhibits that are highly artificial, they

depart with " a significantly greater negativistic and dominionistic attitude to

animals. " That is why it is necessary to ask for more than improved aesthetics,

better customer service, or healthier food and more sophisticated souvenirs. It

is also essential to reach the point where the only zoos allowed by law are

those that aim to create respect for wildlife and a desire to save wildlife

habitat, by making animal welfare their first priority, by adopting conservation

strategies as a central tenet of their operational, budgeting, and marketing

decisions, and by injecting passion and daring into their interaction with

visitors. I am confident that the public wants these challenges and wishes their

zoos to have a strong voice and would welcome the leadership of zoos in wildlife

and natural resources conservation. If these changes do not occur, then zoos

must surely become increasingly meaningless.

 

There are stories strange and wonderful in the history of zoos, but perhaps

their most extraordinary days are just unfolding. As an ever more ecologically

hazardous future unfolds, our society needs institutions that can not only

remind people of what losses are risked by reckless actions, but can also

inspire compassion for other animals and reveal ways to live in better harmony

with Nature.

 

The history of zoos is replete with contradictions. People have set up zoos

because they wanted to control big strong animals and sought reflected power

from being able to own savage beasts. But there are also zoo professionals who

seek to inspire love and gentleness toward animals. And in recent years there

are increasing numbers of people who want to work in zoos because they are

passionate about wildlife conservation. Herein lies a critical aspect of the

future for zoos. My ambivalence about zoos does not distract me from recognizing

that we urgently need urban-based institutions that will carry not just the

images but also fervent messages about the unnecessary and massive loss of

wildlife habitats around the world, which is unsustainable and is an evil thing.

We have no right and no need to destroy other life forms.

 

Of all the natural history-based institutions that we have invented--museums of

geology, paleontology, zoology, and natural history; botanical gardens;

arboretums; aquariums; and wild animal parks--it is zoos, I believe, that have

the greatest capacity to adapt, absorb new functions, and amalgamate the content

of other institutions. In this way, they can effectively carry the messages of

conservation and wise stewardship. Zoos have the potential to present holistic

philosophies with greater veracity and impact than any other type of

natural-history institution because they can present and interpret all parts of

the story. Therefore, their historic focus on animals alone must shift and

widen. The time is ripe for the zoo's metamorphosis.

 

More zoos are becoming habitat based, explaining ecosystems rather than only

reciting facts about animals. Some zoos are beginning to develop exhibits that

deal with concepts and ideas. Instead of seeing themselves simply as exhibitors

of wild animals, a few zoos are learning to become storytellers. More will

become involved in stories of deep history and of the interactions between human

cultures and wild places. Sadly, there are zoos unworthy of the name that seek

only profit and exploitation. Others are unfortunately limited to poor standards

and have not shown themselves worthy of the magic and splendor of the animals in

their care. They will not survive and do not deserve to. In this book, I examine

the failures and the successes of zoos throughout their strangely checkered

history, but more importantly I explore their amazing potential.

 

©2001 by The Regents of the University of California

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