Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 26 to 42 of 42
  1. #26
    bkkmadness
    Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by November Rain View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by kingwilly
    hmmm, a somewhat simplistic concept here, what about when an animal's natural habititat is extremely threatened? or the host country does not value conservation all that much.
    Then it would be even more necessary to institute conservation in those countries, as far as I can see. To allow the habitat to disappear but say "Oh, it's OK - we've got a few of them in zoos, so we're doing our bit" is a far more simplistic concept, & frankly, a monumental cop-out.
    What about the case of the Panamanian Golden Frog? I saw this animal, filmed for the last time in the wild on the BBC's 'Life in Cold Blood'. The reason for it's extinction in the wild was from local collecting (the frog is thought to be lucky) and mainly because there was a naturally occurring fungus that was killing amphibians in the region.

    The last of these amphibians had to be collected and taken into captivity for their own protection or we would never see this beautiful frog again.



    Denver Zoo: Conservation: Projects

    In collaboration with the Amphibian Recovery Conservation Coalition and the Houston and Denver Zoos, researchers are helping build the El Valle Amphibian Conservation Center in central Panama.

  2. #27
    bkkmadness
    Guest
    So you have Denver Zoo contributing to research projects in Panama, and on the other hand we also have this....



    Bear cages in a Chinese Zoo.



    Killer Whale on display.

  3. #28
    bkkmadness
    Guest
    Wouldn't it be better for the animals if conservation efforts were concentrated in the animals' native countries - in their own habitat? Less stressful, same climate & geography.
    Yes, but not always practical.

    But, then you wouldn't get the punters bringing their kids on a Saturday, would you? Education?
    These punters are bringing a lot of money into zoos which goes towards the funding of research and conservation projects in the animal's native countries.

    I also want to add I spent many a day at London Zoo as a kid, and it was educational for me and developed an awareness for animals and conservation that stays with me to this day.

    I think the modern ideal of zoos as conservation centres is excellent, but unfortunately most zoos do not meet this ideal.

    I also think there is an argument to be made that zoos are often underfunded and need to compromise their ethics to keep running.

  4. #29
    Tiger Bay
    CharleyFarley's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Last Online
    27-01-2011 @ 01:57 AM
    Location
    aberthin
    Posts
    1,722
    The Blue Planet DVD cost me £10.99 by David Livinstone or whoever

    More than one way of contributing to animal conservation.

  5. #30
    Special member
    jizzybloke's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Last Online
    @
    Posts
    7,877
    ^David Attenborough.

  6. #31
    I am in Jail

    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Last Online
    22-11-2011 @ 08:27 AM
    Location
    Christian Country
    Posts
    15,017
    Sometimes these animals need to be placed in sanctuaries/zoos because they have been mistreated their whole lives. This is my favourite animal, the moon bear (they look like my Thai dog or vice versa).




    Wanna read the latest from Clever Magazine?
    Click here and return to the coverpage!


    İAnimals Asia/Kees Metselaar

    This is a Chinese Moon Bear...
    destined to live its life in this cage
    with a rusty catheter attached to its
    gall bladder
    so that Chinese can extract
    its "coveted" bile!
    Dee Walmsley, Clever's nature writer, first brought this Moon Bear information to our attention. She asks the following questions:
    What would you do if you stood eight feet tall and were never able to stand?
    What would you do if you lived in a cage with only enough room to stick out a paw for food?
    What would you do if your teeth were cut off and your nails pulled out?
    What would you do if your ulcerated insides burned from a rusty catheter thrust into your gall bladder to milk its bile?
    What would you do if you were an Asian Moon Bear?
    We contacted Andi Mowrer of the Animals Asia Foundation and she supplied us with answers to these very perplexing questions:
    In October 2000, 63 long-suffering endangered Asiatic Black Bears, nicknamed Moon Bears because of the crescent-shaped marking on their chests, arrived at Animals Asia Foundation’s (AAF) Moon Bear Rescue Center in Sichuan Province, China. Thus began the world’s largest rescue of Moon Bears from bile farms in China, where today approximately 7,000 remain imprisoned in coffin-like cages throughout the country. This historic rescue is the result of a special partnership between the Sichuan Forestry Department, the Beijing-based China Wildlife Conservation Association and Animals Asia Foundation (AAF).
    Although bear bile does have medicinal properties and can be used to treat gallstones and liver disease, the advent of bear farming in the early 1980’s led to a glut in production, and now bile is often marketed in products such as shampoos, wines, sodas, and lozenges, where it is absolutely useless. There are over 50 herbal and synthetic alternatives, which are used worldwide and are cheaper and equally if not more effective.

  7. #32
    bkkmadness
    Guest
    Truly sickening.

  8. #33
    The cold, wet one
    November Rain's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Last Online
    31-03-2015 @ 03:06 PM
    Location
    In my happy place
    Posts
    12,202
    Animals Asia do not put their rescue animals in zoos, Jettie! I've been to one of their sanctuaries in China. It was based solely on rehabilitation of the bears & not on gawp-ability factors.

  9. #34
    Thailand Expat
    DrAndy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Last Online
    25-03-2014 @ 05:29 PM
    Location
    yes
    Posts
    32,025
    strangely enough, if kept properly in a good environment, animals can be happy and healthy in zoos

    they have less stress, do not suffer predators, do not need to fight to keep their territory, do not die as they do in the wild from starvation and illness etc etc

    essentially, as long as an animal has a good environment and has the correct diet, they will be more than happy. So criticism of zoos is often misplaced due to the critic empathising with the animals (I would hate to be locked up all my life etc).

    Having said that, I prefer seeing animals in the wild, it is far more moving and dramatic
    I have reported your post

  10. #35
    Thailand Expat
    Driventowin's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    3rd rock from the sun
    Posts
    1,635
    Quote Originally Posted by November Rain View Post
    The whole thing is fucking sick. Zoos are prison camps for entertainment purposes. The people that go to them are neanderthals or ghoulish. If you want to see real animal behaviour, observe it in the wild or watch Animal Planet (or similar).

    This is wrong. So was Knut's story. Sometimes I really hate people.
    Well here that's certainly the truth and I would say even understated..But I disagree about western zoos...

  11. #36
    Bounced
    Frankenstein's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Last Online
    20-05-2021 @ 02:46 PM
    Location
    The land of milking honeys
    Posts
    3,292
    Quote Originally Posted by bkkmadness View Post

    The last of these amphibians had to be collected and taken into captivity for their own protection or we would never see this beautiful frog again.

    Froget me not.

  12. #37
    I am in Jail

    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Last Online
    22-11-2011 @ 08:27 AM
    Location
    Christian Country
    Posts
    15,017
    ^ Cute.
    Quote Originally Posted by November Rain View Post
    Animals Asia do not put their rescue animals in zoos, Jettie! I've been to one of their sanctuaries in China. It was based solely on rehabilitation of the bears & not on gawp-ability factors.
    OK, I have heard of these places. I would not want them in a Chinese zoo where they are targets of abuse, but I always think of western-type zoos.

  13. #38
    I am in Jail
    Mr Earl's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Last Online
    23-08-2021 @ 06:47 PM
    Location
    In the Jungle of Love
    Posts
    14,771
    There is a tiger "preserve" near Puebla, Mexico that's pretty sick. I quit zooing after seeing that shit. The tigers were either sick or doped up quite sad to see.

    As far as polar bears go they're SOL stuck in a zoo when their natural habitat is vast areas of ice and snow.

    Let's face it humans are focking up the planet for many poor little furry creatures.
    Now where is that neutron bomb we ordered anyway.

  14. #39
    Thailand Expat
    Marmite the Dog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Last Online
    08-09-2014 @ 10:43 AM
    Location
    Simian Islands
    Posts
    34,827
    If the Chinese were made extinct think of all the animals who would be saved from lives of misery.

  15. #40
    I am in Jail

    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Last Online
    22-11-2011 @ 08:27 AM
    Location
    Christian Country
    Posts
    15,017
    ^ True, Marmers, but then where would we get all those cheap microwaves and lead toys from?

    Quote Originally Posted by Mr Earl View Post
    As far as polar bears go they're SOL stuck in a zoo when their natural habitat is vast areas of ice and snow.

    Let's face it humans are focking up the planet for many poor little furry creatures.
    Now where is that neutron bomb we ordered anyway.
    Agree and disagree. I love the animal rights wanklettes who take photos of polar bears perched on a little piece of ice. Oh! Global warming! No ice. Fer fek's sake, they can swim. The prob is their food source is shrinking a bit. So, send Heather Mills back up there. If she can play with baby seals, she'd be good with polar cubs. I am a symbolic adoptive parent of patuqutaujuq (sparkling soft snow) or Pat for short, a polar bear "taken care of" by the WWW. (Hey, he was a Christmas gift). And he is hungry. Heather!!!

  16. #41
    Thailand Expat Texpat's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Last Online
    @
    Location
    In your head
    Posts
    13,058
    In 20 years we'll be eating these critters, not saving them.

  17. #42
    I am in Jail

    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Last Online
    22-11-2011 @ 08:27 AM
    Location
    Christian Country
    Posts
    15,017
    ^ I think Mother Earth will groan and do away with alot of us before that.

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •