Zoo Conservation Success Stories
The Association of Zoos and Aquariums is credited with “building North America’s largest wildlife conservation movement.” This nonprofit organization started in 1924 to accredit exemplary zoos and aquariums that go over and beyond in their standards for animal care, education and wildlife conservation. They work toward educating the public, soliciting donations, rewarding outstanding team players and preserving exotic animals that would otherwise be pushed to the brink of extinction and beyond. Zoo conservation is an important movement to protect the earth’s biodiversity for our children to see.
In 2007, the Association of Zoos and Aquariums released an article discussing zoo conservation success stories that happened that year alone. More than 6,000 Wyoming toad tadpoles were released into the wild, bringing these neat-patterned amphibians back from the brink of extinction. Fifty-two Perdido beach mice were housed in a Florida breeding facility to protect their species following a devastating hurricane. With just 400 North Atlantic right whales left, there are now 3,693 conservation projects underway to improve their situation. The 215 black-and-white ruffed lemurs held in captivity are now being reintroduced to the wild in Madagascar.
Zoo conservation breeding programs are just part of the puzzle, of course. There needs to be government protection of wildlife habitats and careful regulation of development and boating pursuits that threaten endangered species around the world. Far too often human exploits go too far and we destroy the animal kingdom’s environment, without ever really realizing it — until we see a dead whale washed up on the beach with rotor slashes on its back, or a mountain lion dead along a California highway. Zoos around the world are calling attention to these issues, imparting the lessons of conservation upon future generations while they are young and impressionable in hopes of avoiding a dire fate.
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