The historical development of juvenile mortality and adult longevity in zoo‐kept carnivores
Marco Roller, Dennis Müller, Mads F. Bertelsen, Laurie Bingaman Lackey, Jean‐Michel Hatt, Marcus Clauß
Abstract
Zoos need to evaluate their aim of high husbandry standards. One way of approaching this is to use the demographic data that has been collected by participating zoos for decades, assessing historical change over time to identify the presence or absence of progress. Using the example of carnivores, with data covering seven decades (1950-2019), 13 carnivore families, and 95 species, we show that juvenile mortality has decreased, and adult longevity increased, over this interval. While no reason for complacency, the results indicate that the commitment of zoos to continuously improve is having measurable consequences.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyLongevityJuvenileZoologyEcologyGeneticsWildlife Ecology and ConservationAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock