Should Animals be Kept in Zoos?

Should Animals be Kept in Zoos?

For many people, the zoo is a source of childhood amazement and fond memories: swinging monkeys, laughing hyenas and growling tigers. Conservationists say zoos advance their educational and preservationist efforts, but others see zoos as prisons where innocent creatures are unjustly held captive. The next time your child asks you to take them to the zoo, what will your answer be?

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You are seeing 11 Comments on this Argument. See all 66 Comments on this Question.
Regarding Argument
Clearing Up Misconceptions About Zoos
- From Jack Hanna
Yes Side
By Jack Hanna - Director Emeritus, Columbus Zoo

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  • Rainie
    The natural way

    Out there in the animal kingdom, have you ever seen animals keeping other species in their own territory for studying? If yes, then we should keep the zoos. If no, why should we be different?
    Even though zoos have existed for thousands of years, it does not mean that we have to continue running zoos. Just like vegans do not continue eating meat even though humans have been eating meat for a long time.
    It is also unfair for us to take the animals out of their homes.
    Have you ever felt not knowing what was happening but some animals of another species are taking you to their own territory? I have never felt it,but if you have ever and you find it a nice feeling, then go ahead and keep the zoos. I just do not want to risk them feeling confused and their mental health affecting their physical health, so I'd rather not have the zoos.
    As a child, I would rather give up my learning experience if that's the way you want to put it, than let others suffer.

    - Rainie August 10, 2008 8:50AM

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    • vampsquest
      not taking them from their homes

      Like Jack Hanna has already stated zoos don't get animals from the wild anymore they buy them from other zoos or breed them.

      - vampsquestUS February 13, 2009 12:37PM

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    • Curious
      Are we the same as these wild animals then?

      In the wild, as you say, have you ever heard of animals sitting in cubicles for long hours and getting paid so they can buy bigger cars and iPods? Have you seen, in the wild, animals who want to eat other animals but will not themselves kill them, instead buying sanitized packages of dead animal? Why do you equate human behavior with wild animal behavior on this one issue but not on others?

      - CuriousUS March 4, 2009 7:48AM

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    • gatorgirl7563
      "why should we be different"

      WE ARE DIFFERNET.
      Humans are the dominant species on earth. We are the most intelligent. Our intelligence means that our whims can determine the fate of nearly every lifeform on this planet.

      Our intelligence gives us power , and to quote Spiderman's grandma, "With great power comes great responsibility."

      I believe that as the most intelligent species on earth, humans have an responsibility to protect and preserve other lifeforms. We can not do whatever we want. It is our duty to live our lives in a way that minimizes the amount of harm we do to others - human and non-humans alike and equally.

      I am not saying that humans are the BEST species, but we are the one in control and we are the most unique/strange/peculiar.

      " animals [don't] keep other species... for studying,... why should we be different?" WE ARE DIFFERNET.
      We watch tv, get vaccines , wear jewelry and clothes, brush our teeth, start wars over diamonds and oil , and kill for reasons other than self-defense and food . We value virginity, and ponder religion , God, and morality . We marry, and care about beings we've never met and will never meet (tigers, Aids Epidemic and starving children in Africa). We read, write, cook , farm, and fertilize. We have jobs, use money , perform surgeries, and eat so much more food than we need to survive that we become obese. We claim that one member of our species is superior to another because of their skin color, get abortions, make bombs, and ensure the survival of our old, and weak, and crippled long past the time that they are able to take care of themselves.
      Some of those things make us WORSE than animals,
      and
      some of those things make up BETTER than animals,
      but
      all of those things make us DIFFERENT from animals.

      So it is not a valid arguement, that because other species don't do something we should not either.

      That arguement is just a reversal of the teenagers' claim/excuse that something is okay because "everyone else is doing it."

      - gatorgirl7563US April 16, 2009 3:36PM

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  • blond2much
    Perhaps Zoo's are okay

    If the animals are maintained and treated properly as well as bred and raised within the zoo, than I see those animals as lucky. They will never have to survive or fight for food or die a violent death by another animal in the zoo. Nature is rough and I think under good conditions those animals are lucky to be there.

    - blond2muchUS September 15, 2008 1:52PM

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  • happyface4638
    yes, they should

    I think animals should be kept in the zoo because animals shouldnt be in the wild. Animals such as elephants and girafes should be kept in zoos to be healthy and clean. Some people see zoos as a prision but its actually better for animals than the wild.


    - happyface4638 February 25, 2009 7:15PM

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  • amj
    it's all about the Benjamins

    Zoos are about making money, many a profit is made off the back of an animal. How can keeping an animal in a setting as unnatural as a zoo help conserve the species? While the zoo is busy "conserving" the species it's natural habitat is being destroyed and overrun by humans. The only thing learned by a zoo is how to oppress other species for our entertainment and amusement.

    - amjUS March 20, 2009 9:10AM

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  • Animalwelfare2007
    The Last Days

    Due to human overpopulation of this world, animals are losing their natural habitats. Starvation and the lost of their land, is slowing dimenishing. Some day, the only animals you will be able to see, to teach your children about the animals of this world, will be in zoos. The animals you see, have been bred domestically, and are NOT taken from the wild. Because they have been bred domestically, they have lost that certain edge they need for survial that can only be taught in the wild by their parents . To ship them to a land, they know nothing of would be a death sentence . To prove my point, a cheetah brother and sister, that was raised by humans, was shipped to southern Africa. The brother was murdered by a pride of lions, because he teased them. If he was born in the wild, his mother would have "taught" him to stay away from the predators - the big cats. So to ship them to a land they know nothing of, is a death sentence. Once again, the animals you see in zoos, are domestically bred - they are NOT taken from the wild.

    - Animalwelfare2007US April 1, 2009 8:34AM

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  • sor666
    Zoos no longer hold wild animals

    I am very sensitive to animal rights - but I have no objection to zoos - because most animals there were born in captivity and zoos are the only place where some sepecies are safe, receive good vet care and live a healthy life.

    - sor666AU May 6, 2009 8:00AM

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  • Mcdowelli76
    True zooilogical centers are not sideshows

    Credible zoos should not be lumped together with circus's and sideshows. I understand that most actual zoos in the USA are for research as well as public recreation. Not every zoo in the world or place with zoo in the title at the entrance does this but there is a difference and opposing credible facilitines works against conservation efforts.

    - Mcdowelli76US May 29, 2009 8:38PM

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  • roguegrafix
    Would you prefer the Ritz or the Gutter Part 1

    The following is from The Life of Pi by Yann Martel (Cannongate Books 2002 pp19-25). It sums up my views exactly:

    I have heard nearly as much nonsense about zoos as I have about God and religion . Well-meaning but misinformed people think animals in the wild are “happy” because they are “free”. These people usually have a large, handsome predator in mind, a lion or a cheetah (the life of a gnu or of an aardvark is rarely exalted). They imagine this wild animal roaming about the savannah on digestive walks after eating a prey that accepted its lot piously, or going for callisthenic runs to stay slim after overindulging. They imagine this animal overseeing its offspring proudly and tenderly, the whole family watching the setting of the sun from the limbs of trees with sighs of pleasure. The life of the wild animal is simple, noble and meaningful, they imagine. Then it is captured by wicked men and thrown into tiny jails. Its “happiness” is dashed. It yearns mightily for “freedom” and does all it can to escape. Being denied its “freedom” for too long, the animal becomes a shadow of itself; its spirit broken. So some people imagine.
    This is not the way it is.

    Animals in the wild lead lives of compulsion and necessity within an unforgiving social hierarchy in an environment where the supply of fear is high and the supply of food low and where territory must constantly be defended and parasites forever endured. What is the meaning of freedom in such a context? Animals in the wild are, in practice, free neither in space nor in time, nor in their personal relations. In theory—that is, as a simple physical possibility—an animal could pick up and go, flaunting all the social conventions and boundaries proper to its species. But such an event is less likely to happen than for a member of our own species, say a shopkeeper with all the usual ties—to family, to friends, to society — to drop everything and walk away from his life with only the spare change in his pockets and the clothes on his frame. If a man, boldest and most intelligent of creatures, won’t wander from place to place, a stranger to all, beholden to none, why would an animal, which is by temperament far more conservative? For that is what animals are, conservative, one might even say reactionary. The smallest changes can upset them. They want things to be just so, day after day, month after month. Surprises are highly disagreeable to them. You see this in their spatial relations. An animal inhabits its space, whether in a zoo or in the wild, in the same way chess pieces move about a chessboard—significantly. There is no more happenstance, no more “freedom”, involved in the whereabouts of a lizard or a bear or a deer than in the location of a knight on a chessboard. Both speak of pattern and purpose. In the wild, animals stick to the same paths for the same pressing reasons, season after season. In a zoo, if an animal is not in its normal place in its regular posture at the usual hour, it means something. It may be the reflection of nothing more than a minor change in the environment. A coiled hose left out by a keeper has made a menacing impression. A puddle has formed that bothers the animal. A ladder is making a shadow. But it could mean some­thing more. At its worst, it could be that most dreaded thing to a zoo director: a symptom, a herald of trouble to come, a reason to inspect the dung, to cross-examine the keeper, to summon the vet. All this because a stork is not standing where it usually stands!

    - roguegrafixTH May 30, 2009 3:38AM

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Keep Animals in Zoos?

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  • Jack Hanna
    Jack Hanna is the director emeritus for the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium and host of “Jack Hanna’s Into the Wild” and “Jack Hanna’s Animal Adventures.”... More

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