Schönbrunn Zoo
Zoo no longer names baby animals – to avoid “humanizing” them
It is a novelty in German-speaking countries: the Schönbrunn Zoo in Vienna no longer wants to give young animals names. This is intended to draw attention away from the individual to species protection.
However, the Schönbrunn Zoo in Vienna has decided to proceed differently in the future. Animal babies should no longer be given names there, zoo director Stephan Hering-Hagenbeck told the “Tiroler Tageszeitung”. At least these should no longer be communicated to the public. The Austrian zoo is thus playing a pioneering role. “We are deliberately taking a new path here for the German-speaking region,” explained Hering-Hagenbeck.
Schönbrunn Zoo: Director sees “humanization of wild animals”
The reason given by the zoo director for the decision was that they no longer wanted to draw attention to individual animals, which were then ascribed almost human characteristics. “It was a sensation when a director held a young animal in his or her arms. Of course, this was accompanied by a humanization of the wild animal,” said Hering-Hagenbeck. “For a long time, the focus was on the display of a single individual.”
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So now the paradigm shift in Schönbrunn Zoo: In the future, “the preservation of a population should be more important there – and not the individual”. In this way, the protection of species should be better guaranteed, which is the focus of zoological work today. Nevertheless, zoos continue to be regularly criticized by animal welfare organizations for not allowing wild animals their natural habitat.
Source: “Tyrolean Daily Newspaper” / Schönbrunn Zoo
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