Abstract

ABSTRACTZoos serve as recreation facilities and tourist attractions, but their primary roles also include education, research and conservation. Conservation in particular has emerged as a vital component of zoos, with the aim of diversifying the genetic base of many species that have been rendered threatened or endangered. However, conservation is often couched within a managerial structure that places individual animal interests against broader species specific interests and economic considerations. Zoos make trade-offs between these considerations according to issues of space, efficiency and profitability. This conflict has recently come to the fore in reference to the elimination of Marius, a healthy 18-month-old male giraffe, at the Copenhagen Zoo, which elicited a public uproar. We consider the reasons and alleged constraints which led the Zoo to its decision to eliminate Marius, examine the reactions of scientists and members of the public to the event, interpret it as a consequence of conflicts between the multiple roles of contemporary Western zoos, and discuss it in terms of competing approaches to animal ethics.

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