A
zoological garden,
zoological
park,
menagerie, or
zoo
is a facility in which animals are confined within enclosures,
displayed to the public, and in which they may also be bred.
The term zoological garden refers to
zoology, the study of animals, a term deriving from
the
Greek zωο (
Zōo
– "animal") and
λóγος (
lógos – "study").
The
abbreviation "zoo" was first used of the London
Zoological Gardens
, which opened for scientific study in 1828 and
to the public in 1847. The number of major animal
collections open to the public around the world now exceeds 1,000,
around 80 percent of them in cities.
Etymology
London Zoo, launched in 1828, first called itself a menagerie or
"zoological garden," short for "Gardens and Menagerie of the
Zoological Society of London."
The abbreviation "zoo" first appeared in
print in the UK around 1847, when it was used for the Clifton Zoo
, but it was not until some twenty years later that
the shortened form became popular in the song "Walking in the Zoo
on Sunday" by music-hall artist Alfred
Vance. The term "zoological park" was used for more
expansive facilities in Washington, D.C.
, and the Bronx in New York, which opened in 1891
and 1899 respectively.
Relatively new terms for zoos coined in the late twentieth century
are "conservation park" or "biopark". Adopting a new name is a
strategy used by some zoo professionals to distance their
institutions from the stereotypical and nowadays criticized zoo
concept of the nineteenth century.
The term "biopark" was first coined and
developed by the National Zoo
, Washington, D.C. in the late 1980s. In
1993, the
New York Zoological Society changed its name to
the
Wildlife Conservation
Society and rebranded the zoos under its jurisdiction as
"wildlife conservation parks."
History
Ancient world
The predecessor of the zoological garden is the
menagerie, which has a long history from the
ancient world to modern times. In the second century BCE, the
Chinese Empress Tanki had a "house
of deer" built, and
King Wen of
Zhou kept a 1,500-acre zoo called
Ling-Yu, or the
Garden of Intelligence. Other well-known collectors of animals
included
King Solomon of the
Kingdom of Israel and Judah, Kings Semirami
and
Ashurbanipal of
Assyria, and King
Nebuchadrezzar of
Babylonia. By the fourth century BCE, zoos existed
in most of the Greek city states;
Alexander the Great is known to have
sent animals that he found on his military expeditions back to
Greece. The Roman emperors kept private collections of animals for
study or for use in the arena, the latter faring notoriously
poorly. The 19th-century historian
W.E.H. Lecky wrote of the
Roman games, first held in 366 BCE:
Medieval England
Henry I of England kept a collection of
animals at his palace in Woodstock
, which reportedly included lions, leopards, and
camels. The most prominent collection in medieval
England was in the Tower of London
, created as early as 1204 by King John I. Henry III received a wedding gift in
1235 of three leopards from
Frederick II, Holy Roman
Emperor, and in 1264, the animals were moved to the Bulwark,
renamed the Lion Tower, near the main western entrance of the
Tower. It was opened to the public during the reign of
Elizabeth I in the 16th century.
During the 18th century, the price of admission was three
half-pence, or the supply of a cat or dog for feeding to the lions.
The animals were moved to the London Zoo when it opened.
Modern era
The oldest
existing zoo, the Vienna Zoo
in Austria, evolved from the Imperial Menagerie at
the Schönbrunn
Palace
in Vienna, an aristocratic menagerie founded in
1752 by the Habsburg monarchy, which was
opened to the public in 1765. In 1775, a zoo was
founded in Madrid, and in 1795, the zoo inside the Jardin des
Plantes
in Paris was founded by Jacques-Henri
Bernardin, with animals from the royal menagerie at Versailles,
primarily for scientific research and education.
The
Zoological Society of
London, founded in 1826 by Stamford
Raffles, adopted the idea of the Paris zoo when they
established the London
Zoo
in Regent's
Park
in 1828, which opened to paying visitors in
1847. The first zoological garden in Australia was
Melbourne
Zoo
in 1860. In the same year, Central Park
Zoo
, the first public zoo in the United States, opened
in New York, although in 1859, the Philadelphia Zoological
Society
had made an effort to establish a zoo, but delayed
opening it until 1874 because of the American Civil War.
When
ecology emerged as a matter of public
interest in the 1970s, a few zoos began to consider making
conservation their central role, with Gerald Durrell of the Jersey
Zoo
, George Rabb of Brookfield Zoo
, and William Conway of the Bronx Zoo
(Wildlife
Conservation Society) leading the discussion. From then
on, zoo professionals became increasingly aware of the need to
engage themselves in conservation programs, and the
American Zoo Association
soon said that conservation was its highest priority. Because they
wanted to stress conservation issues, many large zoos stopped the
practice of having animals perform tricks for visitors.
The
Detroit
Zoo
, for example, stopped its elephant show in 1969,
and its chimpanzee show in 1983, acknowledging that the trainers
had probably abused the animals to get them to
perform.
Human exhibits
Human beings were sometimes displayed in cages along with non-human
animals, supposedly to illustrate the differences between people of
European and non-European origin.
In September 1906, William Hornaday,
director of the Bronx
Zoo
in New York—with the agreement of Madison Grant, head of the New York Zoological Society—had
Ota Benga, a Congolese pygmy, displayed in a cage with the chimpanzees, then
with an orangutan named Dohong, and a
parrot. The exhibit was intended as an example of the
"missing link" between the orangutan and white man. It triggered
protests from the city's clergymen, but the public reportedly
flocked to see it.
Human beings were also displayed in cages during the 1931
Paris Colonial Exposition, and as
late as 1958 in a "Congolese village" display at
Expo '58 in Brussels.
Appearance and type
Zoo animals usually live in enclosures that attempt to replicate
their natural
habitat, for the
benefit of the animals and the visitors. They may have special
buildings for
nocturnal animals, with dim
white or red lighting used during the day, so the animals will be
active when visitors are there, and brighter lights at night to
help them sleep. Special climate conditions are created for animals
living in radical environments, such as penguins. Special
enclosures for birds, insects, reptiles, fish, and other aquatic
life forms have also been developed. Some zoos have walk-through
exhibits where visitors enter enclosures of non-aggressive species,
such as
lemurs,
marmosets, birds, lizards, and turtles. Visitors
are asked to keep to paths and avoid showing or eating foods that
the animals might snatch.
Open-range zoos
Some zoos keep fewer animals in larger, outdoor enclosures,
confining them with
moats and fences, rather
than in cages.
Safari parks, also known
as zoo parks and lion farms, allow visitors to drive through them
and come in close contact with the animals.
The first of this
kind of zoo was Whipsnade
Park
in Bedfordshire, England, opened by the Zoological
Society of London in 1931, and covering 600 acres (2.4 km²).
Since the
early 1970s, a 1,800-acre (7 km²) park in the San Pasqual Valley
near San Diego has featured the San Diego
Wild Animal Park
, run by the Zoological Society of San Diego.
One of
two state-supported zoo parks in North Carolina is the 535-acre
North
Carolina Zoo
in Asheboro. The 500-acre Werribee
Open Range Zoo
in Melbourne, Australia, displays animals living in
a savannah.
Public aquaria
The first
public aquarium was opened
in London Zoo in 1853. This was followed by the opening of public
aquaria in Europe (for example, Paris 1859, Hamburg 1864, Berlin
1869, Brighton 1872) and the United States (Boston 1859, Washington
1873, San Francisco Woodward's Garden 1873, New York Battery Park
1896).
In
2005 the non-profit Georgia Aquarium
with more than 8 million US gallons (30,000 m³;
30,000,000 litres) of marine and fresh water, and more than 100,000
animals of 500 different species opened in Atlanta, Georgia
. The aquarium's specimens include
whale sharks and
beluga whales.
Roadside zoos
Roadside zoos are found throughout North America, particularly in
remote locations. They are small, unregulated, for-profit zoos,
often intended to attract visitors to some other facility, such as
a gas station. The animals may be trained to perform tricks, and
visitors are able to get closer to them than in larger zoos.
Petting zoos
A petting zoo, also called children's farms or children's zoos,
features a combination of
domestic
animals and wild species that are docile enough to touch and
feed. To ensure the animals' health, the food is supplied by the
zoo, either from vending machines or a kiosk nearby.
Animal theme parks
An animal theme park is a combination of an
amusement park and a zoo, mainly for
entertaining and commercial purposes.
Marine mammal parks such as Sea World
and Marineland are more
elaborate dolphinariums keeping
whales, and containing additional
entertainment attractions. Another kind of animal theme park
contains more entertainment and amusement elements than the
classical zoo, such as a stage shows, roller coasters, and mythical
creatures.
Some examples are Busch
Gardens Africa
in Tampa,
Florida
and Disney's Animal Kingdom
in Orlando, Florida
.
Sources and care of animals
In a modern zoo, about five animals are bred in captivity for every
20 animals on display. When they arrive at the zoo, the animals are
placed in quarantine, and slowly acclimatized to enclosures which
seek to mimic their natural environment. For example, some species
of penguins may require refrigerated enclosures. Guidelines on
necessary care for such animals is published in the
International Zoo Yearbook.
Conservation and research
The position of most modern zoos in Australasia, Europe, and North
America, particularly those with scientific societies, is that they
display wild animals primarily for the
conservation of endangered
species, as well as for
research purposes and education, and
secondarily for the entertainment of visitors, an argument disputed
by critics. The Zoological Society of London states in its charter
that its aim is "the advancement of Zoology and Animal Physiology
and the introduction of new and curious subjects of the Animal
Kingdom." It maintains two research institutes, the Nuffield
Institute of Comparative Medicine and the Wellcome Institute of
Comparative Physiology. In the U.S., the Penrose Research
Laboratory of the Philadelphia Zoo focuses on the study of
comparative
pathology. The World
Association of Zoos and Aquariums produced its first conservation
strategy in 1993, and in November 2004, it adopted a new strategy
that sets out the aims and mission of zoological gardens of the
twenty-first century.
The breeding of endangered species is coordinated by cooperative
breeding programmes containing international studbooks and
coordinators, who evaluate the roles of individual animals and
institutions from a global or regional perspective, and there are
regional programmes all over the world for the conservation of
endangered species.
The
animal rights organization,
People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), argues against the
position of the zoos that their main purpose is to undertake
research and aid in conservation, alleging that most zoo research
is geared toward finding new ways to breed and maintain animals in
captivity. Andrew Linzey, director of the Oxford Centre for Animal
Ethics, argues that zoos make a "minuscule contribution to
conservation."
Surplus animals
This chimpanzee was passed around five zoos before arriving in a
Texas roadside zoo at the age of 37.
Because for every animal caught in the wild, several more are
killed in the process, the breeding of animals within zoos is
encouraged. Eric Baratay and Elisabeth Hardouin-Fugier of the
Université Jean-Moulin, Lyon, say that the overall "stock turnover"
of animals is one-fifth to one-fourth over the course of a
year—with three-quarters of apes dying in captivity within the
first twenty months. They say that the high mortality rate is the
reason for the "massive scale of importations."
The downside to breeding the animals in captivity is that thousands
of them are placed on "surplus lists" each year, and sold to
circuses, animal merchants, auctions, pet owners, and game farms.
The
San Jose Mercury News conducted a two-year study that
suggested of the 19,361 mammals who left accredited zoos in the
U.S. between 1992 and 1998, 7,420 (38 percent) went to dealers,
auctions, hunting ranches, unaccredited zoos and individuals, and
game farms.
Zoos have advertised surplus animals in the
Animal Finders'
Guide, a newsletter in which the owners of hunting ranches
post notices of sales and auctions.
Matthew Scully writes that many hunters
prefer killing animals from zoos because they make better-looking
trophies; the mane of a zoo lion will tend to be cleaner than that
of a wild one. In one case, a zoo owner named William Hampton was
found to have been buying animals and systematically slaughtering
them in order to sell their skins, heads, and pelts as
trophies.
Animals who breed frequently, such as deer, tiger, and lions may be
killed for their meat; Nuremberg zoo's deputy director, Helmut
Mägdefrau, has said, "If we cannot find good homes for the animals,
we kill them and use them as feed." Other animals may be sold to
smaller zoos with poor conditions. PETA cites the example of Edith,
a chimpanzee found in a concrete pit in a roadside zoo called the
Amarillo Wildlife Refuge in Texas.
She had been born in the Saint Louis
Zoo
, but had been sold just after her third birthday,
and for the next 37 years was passed around five other facilities
before landing in the roadside zoo.
It was
alleged in March 2008 that hundreds of the Berlin Zoo
's 23,000 animals are missing, amid allegations that
they have been slaughtered, and that some tigers and leopards were
sent to China to make drugs for traditional Chinese medicine. Claudia
Hämmerling, a Green Party politician, said she had evidence that
four Asian black bears and a hippopotamus were taken from Berlin to
go to a new home, but were transported instead to
Wortel in Belgium, which
The Guardian
reports has no zoo, but does have a
slaughterhouse. The zoo's director, Bernhard
Blaszkiewitz, replied that the allegations were "untruths,
half-truths and lies."
Condition of the animals
The condition of the animals varies widely, especially in zoos in
countries with little or no regulations. The majority of the large
non-profit and scientifically oriented institutions are working to
improve their animal enclosures, although constraints like size and
expense make it difficult to create ideal captive environments for
some species, such as dolphins and whales.
The bear cages, one square meter in size, in Dalian zoo, Port
Arthur, Liaoning Province, China, in 1997.
Some critics argue that animals who live in zoos are treated as
voyeuristic objects rather than living creatures, and are often
driven to insanity in the transition from being free and wild to
incarcerated and dependent on humans for survival.
A
four-decade Oxford
University
study found that polar bears, lions, tigers, and
cheetahs show the most evidence of stress in captivity. A
PETA investigation of zoos in the U.S. found that several bear
species were engaging in neurotic,
stereotypical behavior, including
pacing, walking in circles, and swaying or rolling their heads. The
Badaltearing Safari Park in China keeps a pair of moon bears in
cages so small that they are unable to turn around. The
Daily
Mail reported in January 2008 that one of them appeared to
have gone insane and spends its time shaking its head and banging
into the sides of the cage.
Live killing
In the Badaltearing Safari Park in China, zoo visitors can throw
live goats into the lions' enclosure and watch them being eaten, or
can purchase live
chickens tied to
bamboo rods for the equivalent of £2 to dangle into
lion pens. Visitors can drive through the lion's compound on buses
with specially designed chutes leading into the enclosure into
which they can push live chickens. In the Xiongsen Bear and Tiger
Mountain Village near Guilin in south-east China, live cows and
pigs are thrown to tigers to amuse visitors.
In Qingdao zoo, near Beijing, visitors engage in "tortoise
baiting", where tortoises are kept inside small rooms with elastic
bands round their necks, so that they are unable to retract their
heads. Visitors then throw coins at them. If you hit one of them on
the head and make a wish, it will be fulfilled, the story
goes.
Regulation of zoos
United States of America
In the
United States of america, any public animal exhibit must be
licensed and inspected by the United
States Department of Agriculture
, United States
Environmental Protection Agency, Drug Enforcement Agency, Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, and others. Depending
on the animals they exhibit, the activities of zoos are regulated
by laws including the
Endangered
Species Act, the
Animal Welfare
Act, the
Migratory
Bird Treaty Act of 1918 and others. Additionally, zoos in North
America may choose to pursue accreditation by the
Association of Zoos and
Aquariums (AZA). To achieve accreditation, a zoo must pass an
application and inspection process and meet or exceed the AZA's
standards for animal health and welfare, fundraising, zoo staffing,
and involvement in global conservation efforts. Inspection is
performed by three experts (typically one veterinarian, one expert
in animal care, and one expert in zoo management and operations)
and then reviewed by a panel of twelve experts before accreditation
is awarded. This accreditation process is repeated once every five
years. The AZA estimates that there are approximately 2,400 animal
exhibits operating under USDA license as of February 2007; fewer
than 10% are accredited.
Europe
In April 1999, the
European Union
introduced a directive to strengthen the conservation role of zoos,
making it a statutory requirement that they participate in
conservation and education, and requiring all member states to set
up systems for their licensing and inspection. Zoos are regulated
in the UK by the Zoo Licensing Act of 1981, which came into force
in 1984. A zoo is defined as any "establishment where wild animals
are kept for exhibition ... to which members of the public have
access, with or without charge for admission, seven or more days in
any period of twelve consecutive months," excluding circuses and
pet shops. The Act requires that all zoos be inspected and
licensed, and that animals kept in enclosures are provided with a
suitable environment in which they can express most normal
behavior.
Gallery
Image:Leopard in the Colchester
Zoo.jpg|Leopard in Colchester Zoo
, UK
.Image:Amurtiger.jpg|Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris
altaica) in a landscape
immersion exhibit at Zurich Zoo
, Switzerland
.Image:Edi2.jpg|King
Penguins (Aptenodytes patagonicus) at Edinburgh Zoo
.Image:Sydney_taronga_zoo.jpg|Giraffes in
Sydney's Taronga
Zoo
in 2002.Image:Lahore zoo - june 3
2004-(69)-Chimpanzee.JPG|Chimpanzee
(Pan troglodytes) at Lahore Zoo
, Pakistan
, in June 2004.Image:Animal artists
at the Jardin des Plantes.jpg|Artists at the Ménagerie du
Jardin des Plantes
(Painting from 1902).Image:Arnhemzoo1.jpg|Indoor exhibit at
Burgers'
Zoo
(Netherlands
).Image:Panda enclosure at Chiang Mai
zoo-KayEss-2.jpeg|
Giant Panda enclosure
at Chiang Mai Zoo.
Image:Hearst Grizzly Gulch - San Francisco
Zoo.jpg|Bears (Ursus arctos) at
San
Francisco Zoo
.Image:Barcelona.Zoologico.Delfin.jpg|Aquarium
with a
dolphin at the Barcelona
Zoo.
Image:Estátuadetigrezoológicorio.jpg|A
jaguar statue in Rio de Janeiro
's Zoological Garden.Image:Elephantsfrontgirlriodejaneiro.jpg|The
old style elephant enclosure at Rio de Janeiro Zoo
(Brazil
).Image:Chimpanzee in zoo AB.jpg|Chimpanzee in
Warsaw
Zoo
in June 2006.Image:HK Zoo NB Gdns Emperor Tamarin
1.jpg |Emperor Tamarin (Saguinus
imperator) at Hong Kong Zoological and Botanical
Gardens
, Hong
Kong
.Image:St Louis zoo crocodiles.jpg|Spectacled Caimans (Caiman
crocodilus) at the Herpetarium in Saint Louis
Zoological Park
.Image:Bristol.zoo.aquarium.arp.jpg|The South
East Asian tank at Bristol
Zoo
, England.Image:Pyranha Pygocentrus piraya group
1280.jpg|Tank with piranhas, at Antwerp Zoo
, Belgium
.File:Lory Loft 3, Jurong Bird Park, Oct
05.JPG|Spacious walk-in aviary at Jurong
BirdPark
in
Singapore
.File:Butterfly zoo guide.JPG|Butterfly zoo at Saint Louis
Zoo
.File:Nitesafari01-thai.JPG|Zebra at Chiang Mai
Night Safari
, Thailand
.
See also
Notes
References
- Blunt, Wilfrid (1976). The Ark in the Park: The Zoo in the
Nineteenth Century, Hamish Hamilton, London. ISBN
0241893313
- Conway, William (1995). "The conservation park: A new zoo
synthesis for a changed world", in The Ark Evolving: Zoos and
Aquariums in Transition, Wemmer, Christen M. (ed.), Smithsonian
Institution Conservation and Research
Center
, Front Royal, Virginia
.
- Hyson, Jeffrey (2000). " Jungle of Eden: The Design of American Zoos" in
Environmentalism in Landscape
Architecture, Conan, Michel (ed.), Dumbarton Oaks,
Washington. ISBN 0884022781
- Hyson, Jeffrey (2003). "Zoos," in Encyclopedia of World
Environmental History: O-Z, Krech, Shepard, Mc Neill, John
Robert and Merchant, Carolyn (ed.), Routledge, London. ISBN
0415937353
- Maple, Terry (1995). "Toward a Responsible Zoo Agenda", in
Ethics on the Ark: Zoos, Animal Welfare, and Wildlife
Conservation, Norton, Bryan G., Hutchins, Michael, Stevens,
Elizabeth F. and Maple, Terry L. (ed.), Smithsonian Institution
Press, Washington. ISBN 1-56098-515-1
- Reichenbach, Herman (2002). "Lost Menageries: Why and How Zoos
Disappear (Part 1)", International Zoo News Vol.49/3 (No.316), April-May
2002.
- Robinson, Michael H. (1987a). "Beyond the zoo: The biopark",
Defenders of Wildlife
Magazine, Vol. 62, No. 6.
- Robinson, Michael H. (1987b). "Towards the Biopark: The Zoo
That Is Not", American Association of Zoological Parks and
Aquariums, Annual Proceedings.
Further reading