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Old 01-18-2009, 06:26 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by levi1803 View Post
The Calgary zoo contributes a lot to research, species survival and the well being of many animals, they also have one of the most succesfull breeding programs for Canada most endangered species the Vancouver Island Marmot. All in all I think this was a freak accident and will continue supporting them and all the fantastic work that they do.
fair enough, that's a plus for them in my books. I am not a fan of institutions that are pure tourist attractions.

this particular case seems like a freak accident to me and the article's subject (some random woman) doesn't strike me as someone who knows the inner workings of what went down that day. She (or the media portrays her to) assumes that the zoo's vet staff took too long to get to the enclosure... but how can she know that, if she wasn't there? the staff were already performing CPR by the time she got back!

the article also chooses to forget a few details in this little segment "In November of last year, an elephant calf died from a virus. And last May, 41 stingrays mysteriously died. In 2006, four gorillas died, including a baby less than two weeks old. Two years before that, a three-week-old elephant died after being rejected by its mother." the elephant rejection was not something they could control to any degree; that's mum's responsability. I am not sure how sanitary their facility is but, in captivity, babies die. sad, but that's all there is to it, so you can't point fingers at the calgary zoo in particular because it happens everywhere; you just don't hear about it. Did anyone ever follow up on the rays? im still curious about that one. my point is that we don't know any of the details to these occurences. so we can't pass judgement on the zoo, good or bad, based on them.
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