The Dictionary of Human Geography

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human entertainment and education,ex situ
breeding and conservation. Initially developed
from menageries of animal exotica, and
designed for human consumption, zoos
responded in the mid-to-late twentieth cen-
tury to public anxiety, animal welfare and
environmental criticisms by re-staging and
re-selling animal collections as crucial tobio-
diversity conservation (Anderson, 1995).
Zoos then formednetworkslinked by the
movements of animals, reproductive tissues


and records (Whatmore, 2002a). Animal
lives were behaviourally enhanced, and
collections shifted from the comprehensive
(displaying a wide variety of specimen spe-
cies) to the specialized (focused on sustain-
able groups of species types). Criticisms
remain, especially from those who regard
zoo improvements as little other than
conscience and market protection devices in
an increasingly competitive edu-tainment
sector. sjh

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_Z Final Proof page 817 30.3.2009 7:48pm

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