BBC Focus

(Marcin) #1
ntil fairly recently, zoos and aquariums were primarily
places to take children for a fun afternoon. Few people
gave ethics much thought as they stood in front of a
cagewatchingatigerpacingbackandforth.Today,
however, the entire enterprise of displaying wild
animals is under intense scrutiny, by both the general
public and the scientific community. We now know a
lotmoreabouthowanimalsfareinzoosand
aquariums (and we therefore understand why that
tiger was pacing), and zoos and aquariums have to
answer tough questions when they claim, for example,
that all of the animals in their collections live long,
happy and healthy lives.

A DIFFERENT LOOK
Notsolongago,thecollectionsofunusualandexotic
creaturesatzoosincludedhumansfromothercultures
aroundtheworld.Asrecentlyastheearly1900s,
people from Africa were displayed as exhibits. One of
themostfamousoftheseindividualswasOtaBenga,a
Congolese man who was captured by slave traders and
taken to the US where he was

Not so long


ago, the


collections


of unusual


creatures


at zoos


included


humans


from other


cultures


OPINION| ZOOS


the changes have little to do with what the various
animals need to thrive and more to do with the
appearance of nature.
In2016,zoosandaquariumsstrugglewiththefact
that people are more informed about the mental and
social complexity of non-human animals and the
psychologicalcharacteristicstheysharewithus.
We’ve seen dolphins recognising themselves in
mirrors, chimpanzees grieving, elephants consoling
oneanother,crowsmakingcomplextools,pigsplaying
video games, and fish enjoying friendships together.
Characteristicslikethesenotonlyallowustosee
ourselves in them; they also make it clearer why many
a nimals fa re so poorly in captivity.

TRAGIC EVENTS
Thelastfewyearshavealsoseenaseriesofeventsthat
have brought to the fore the challenges faced by both
animals and humans in zoo and aquarium settings. The
2010killingoftrainerDawnBrancheaubyorcaTilikum
at SeaWorld Orlando in 2010 and films likeThe Cove
andBlackfishhave propelled the marine park industry
into the spotlight, raising troubling questions about the
ethics of holding dolphins and whales in concrete tanks
and forcing them to perform. Following Brancheau’s
death, the USA’s Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) ordered SeaWorld to end
human ‘water work’ with orcas during shows.
Furthermore, a study published in the journalAnimals
in August 2016 found that aggressive behaviour in orcas
increases when they are trained to perform.
Againinresponsetopublicdemand,theUS-based
circus company Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey
Circus put on its last elephant show earlier this year.
Their11elephantshavenowretiredtoafacilityin
Florida. In the UK in the 1990s, rigorous welfare
regulations were introduced regarding captive whales
and dolphins. Existing dolphinaria were incapable of
meeting the new standards. They closed, ending the
UK’s dolphin and whale marine park industry.
More recently, the ongoing news stories about deaths
in zoos around the world – Marius the ‘surplus’ giraffe
in the Copenhagen Zoo, Harambe the gorilla in the
Cincinnati Zoo, and Arturo the polar bear at 2

displayed in the Monkey
House with apes. While Benga
was eventually freed from the
Bronx Zoo, he committed
suicide a few years after
being released.
In the 1960s and 1970s, zoos
and aquariums started to
rebrand themselves as places
of education and conservation.
But in many cases, the change
was largely one of appearance.
Enclosuresandconcretetanks
became ‘habitats’, tricks
became ‘behaviours’, and
elephant displays were painted
with scenes of Africa. And that
is where most zoos and
aquariums still are today.
Small cages with bars may
have been replaced with larger,
more natural-looking areas, but

U

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