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Tiergarten Nürnberg Polar Bear cubs left to die.

Discussion in 'Germany' started by Jarkari, 7 Jan 2008.

  1. Jarkari

    Jarkari Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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  2. jay

    jay Well-Known Member 20+ year member

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    Well this is what the animal rights people wanted. Now let's see them raise a fuss over it, as I'm sure that they will do.
     
  3. snowleopard

    snowleopard Well-Known Member 15+ year member Premium Member

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    Hopefully the mother polar bear feels her maternal instincts kick in, but perhaps being surrounded by concrete and glass leaves her a tad confused.
     
  4. NZ Jeremy

    NZ Jeremy Well-Known Member

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    "We expect to be branded as being cruel to animals. The fact is in nature, if something goes wrong, it goes wrong," he told the newspaper.

    This seems to be one confused deputy zoo director intent on a bit of a social experiment... I would pull the cubs for hand raising...

    I wonder how the zoo vet feels about it...
     
  5. Sun Wukong

    Sun Wukong Well-Known Member

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    This is going to be an interesting case, especially for zoo staff in general (not just the vets)-and lawyers... §2 (1) of the German Animal Protection Law states that the person or organisation that keeps an animal has to make sure to feed, care and accommodate it according to its needs. If the zoo decides to let them starve to death (which I doubt; most likely, they're going to either bottlefeed them or euthanize them), the local anti-zoo lobby, among them notorious Mr. Frank Albrecht, would have the possibility to nail them down to that.
    The circumstances of the births are also quite interesting; both females are now pregnant, so the still very new(!) exhibit wasn't actually properly designed for a case like this right from the start; the male is now housed elsewhere in a kind of provisional way...
    I do like the Nuremberg Zoo, not just because of its "lion-hearted" (a little pun) public justification of the feeding of surplus ungulates as whole carcasses to their carnivores; yet recent public developments, like the turmoil about the dolphin deaths, the dolphin lagoon etc. makes it appear in a somehow bad light-which the anti-zoo lobby is eager to feast upon.
     
  6. NZ Jeremy

    NZ Jeremy Well-Known Member

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    Huh..? You like the place because it bold and seems to make a few gaffes..?
     
  7. jwer

    jwer Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    You gotta be kidding me, you can't do it right can you?

    To my understanding, social interaction in the early years of life are very very important in the life of a polar bear later on. If it's raised by humans it will exhibit the same problems gorilla's seem to get later on, not gettin along socially with animals of the same species, difficulty to breed, being overly agressive and interested by humans and ending up alone and worhless, more or less.

    Therefore, the only reason to save these animals would be if they were genetically highly important, but i don't think they are. There also doesn't seem to be a high interest from other zoo's to take in more polar bears (the trend seems to be to phase them out in most zoo's) so i don't really see why this zoo should do all it can to prevent nature from taking it's course, how harse it is.

    Whatever it'll do, it'll get criticized for it anyway...
     
  8. Sun Wukong

    Sun Wukong Well-Known Member

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    @NZ Jeremy: Here we go again...If You ever have the chance to visit Nuremberg's zoo, do so-then You might know why I like the zoo. What I especially like is said bold way they address in the public problems other zoos keep quiet about or make a big fuss around (see carcass-feeding at Bronx Zoo): for example "getting rid" of surplus ungulates no other zoo wants (instead of giving them to shady animal dealers who give them to who-knows...) by killing them according to official German Slaughter laws and feeding their big cats etc. now and then the whole carcasses.
    @jwer: It depends on the individual case-and if the animal can be re-integrated into the social group (which isn't in Polar bears the same problem as in the more social gorillas etc.). WHY should the zoo do it? See the German law mentioned above.
     
  9. NZ Jeremy

    NZ Jeremy Well-Known Member

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    I wasn't having a go at you Sun, I just didn't understand what you meant...
     
  10. Yassa

    Yassa Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    I think the Zoo is making the right decision here. There is a big difference between Knut`s case and these cubs in Nuremberg - the mothers in Nuremberg cared for their babys and they did survive the first weeks. One of the mothers cares for them very well, while the other leaves the cub(s) often. But the cub is alive and the mother does nurse it!! So why removing the cubs? They probably had a bigger chance of survival if hand-reared from now on (hand-rearing polar bear cubs from day 1 is much more difficult), especially the cub whose mother leaves it often is at risk, but she needs the possibility to practice and gain experience. I don`t really understand why the zoo is making such a fuss about it, officially announcing that they would let the cubs starve.
     
  11. Sun Wukong

    Sun Wukong Well-Known Member

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    @Yassa: I'm pretty sure it's not the zoo making the fuss, but the media, jumping the gun and grossly exaggerating the situation to fabricate an eye-catching headline. As the example of "Knut" showed, nothing gets the public so emotionally agitated as abandoned zoo Polar bear cubs...And at the Nuremberg zoo, at least the zoo management (not the poor zoo staff that is now going to be harassed more or less friendly by the public) might be interested in attracting more public interest-to sell more tickets...;)

    @NZ Jeremy: Did the second post of mine then reach its target? (fingers crossed...;))
     
  12. Toddy

    Toddy Well-Known Member

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    I also think that they should let the mother take care of them. Even if there only is a minimal chance that they will survive, she needs the practice. Then maybe the next litter of cubs will survive.
     
  13. Jurek7

    Jurek7 Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    It is unsolvable dilemma - should zoo be natural or minimise suffering?

    In any case, I imagine animal activists are twisting and turning. Previously they wanted Knut better dead than raised by man. What now?

    BTW, Nurnbergen zoo polar bear enclosure is one of the best - big and grassy. Better not to park foreign car anywhere in the city, though.
     
  14. NZ Jeremy

    NZ Jeremy Well-Known Member

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    There are many factors pointed out here, but two ring true for me:

    How will the zoo justify its Conservation message if it doesn't do every it can to save members of a species that recently got moved "up" to threatened status (please cite)..? If you factor in the German laws pointed out by Sun the zoo sounds like it is setting itself for legal ramifications... Surely these outweigh the "benefits" of leaving them in the enclosure..?

    @Sun... Yes thank you muchly... Please don't think I'm trying I'm to start an argument every time I ask a question of you, thats not my intention...
     
  15. Yassa

    Yassa Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Update: The local newspapers are reporting today that the 2 cubs of the female who showed good maternal behavoir are gone, probably being eaten by the mother after having died from natural causes. The cub of the mother who had been neglecting it has been seen for the first time and is alive and well.

    @ Sun W.: I agree, but why is the zoo fuelling these reports? They are honest, but if I were the director, I had only given the info that cubs have been born and that there is a risk because the mother are unexperienced. Why giving the public details about one female not caring well for the cubs although the keepers didn`t know details about the cub`s condition? After the Knut-mania last year and all the discussion about Leipzig`s decision not to rear the sloth bear cubs, I had kept the whole issue much more quiet. But maybe the director wants to discuss this stuff to educate the public and doesn`t care about negative media reports...
     
  16. Sun Wukong

    Sun Wukong Well-Known Member

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    Why, did You get mobbed? And that in Nuremberg, "home" of the Gingerbread...;)

    @Yassa: "But maybe the director wants to discuss this stuff to educate the public and doesn`t care about negative media reports..." That could be a realistic option; another might have been a casual remark misinterpreted or "upgraded" in terms of sensationalism by the journalists. And the cannibalistic act-well, that fits: the German media currently loves news about mothers killing their children...
     
  17. James27

    James27 Well-Known Member

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    Quoting animal activist:"It should be clear that zoos are responsible for the lives of all the animals in their care. It was the ethical responsibility of the management to give the polar bear cubs a chance of life. Using the argument 'That's Nature' as an excuse for intervening far too late is cynical and inappropriate."

    Hmm who would have guessed that would happen? Kind of hypocritical
     
  18. jay

    jay Well-Known Member 20+ year member

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    Like I said the animal rights groups want it both ways.
     
  19. CZJimmy

    CZJimmy Well-Known Member

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    The main thing that gets to me about these isssues, besides the anti-zoo hypocrisy, is the tarring of every zoo with the same brush.

    There is an article on the BBC website debating the usefulness of zoos in general due to this story, despite the fact that this was a decision taken by one zoo's owners. I believe that in the majority of cases, zoos would follow Berlin's example and hand-rear the animal rather than let the animal die.
     
  20. ZooMania

    ZooMania Well-Known Member

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    I think it's a little bit cruel to be honest and personally would take the same step that Berlin took and hand rear them