The Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) is launching a major conservation campaign in response to the rapid rate of decline of species in the wild. The man in charge of the strategy is Dennis Pate, who’s halfway through his AZA chairmanship and director and CEO of Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium in Omaha, Nebraska – voted TripAdvisor’s number one zoo in the world.
When Pate met with Attractions Management, he explained how the Saving Animals From Extinction (SAFE) initiative is setting a new standard in conservation, and why it’s down to the AZA and its members to take responsibility for protecting vulnerable species at this critical time.
What is SAFE?
Saving Animals from Extinction, or SAFE, is a new initiative by zoos and aquariums to direct more resources towards saving animals from extinction – those in the wild as well as those in zoos. The mission is to combine the power of zoo and aquarium visitors with the resources and collective expertise of AZA members and partners to save the most vulnerable wildlife species from extinction. That can mean intensive management in the zoo or aquarium or less intensive management in the wild.
How did SAFE come about?
What precipitated this is the rapid rate of decline of animals in the wild.
We also have recent data about animals in zoos that show in some cases the populations are not as healthy over a long period as we would like. We may be lacking founders, there may be problems with some species reproducing, or there may not be enough space to build a sufficiently large population to sustain some species well into the future. Some animals, such as gorillas, are doing well; but others, like elephants, not so well.
Is it a global initiative?
Other regions recognise the same issues as AZA zoos and aquariums – the escalating decline of animals in the wild. The SAFE initiative includes zoos and aquariums in the US, Canada, Mexico, Argentina, Singapore, Bermuda, the Bahamas and Hong Kong.
What are you doing first?
It is really a simultaneous effort. First, we need to better understand the populations in the wild and those we keep in zoos and aquariums, and find out what the issues are regarding their sustainability. Currently, more biologists are being hired to zoom in on that. Then, once we understand what the barriers to sustainability are, we can direct more resources towards resolving them.
We want to pick 25 species to focus our efforts. Focusing on species where we can make the biggest difference has been successful for zoos, with black-footed ferrets and California condors, for example.
We have to consider the degree of endangerment and the animal’s status in the wild, as well as the expertise we have and whether we can impact their situation.
With species that are predominantly wild, SAFE’s aims will be more legislative. With sharks, for example, it’s about how we curtail shark finning, how we mitigate bycatch. There are millions and millions of sharks being killed in these ways. These are legislative and political issues and we need to direct resources towards solving them, maybe in different ways than we’re used to. As an association we want to put every effort into these first 25 species.
So it’s a collaborative approach by different zoos and aquariums?
Exactly. So rather than a one-by-one approach with different zoos, we focus all our efforts. Right now, the 229 North American zoos and aquariums spend $160m (£109m, €151m) on field conservation – it’s a major commitment. SAFE will bring a more organised approach to this. We’re formulating the processes of how we’re going to do this and we’re in high gear on fundraising mode – it’s being paid for just not by the members but also by independent fundraising. We’ve hired fundraising consultants Schultz & Williams to help us.
What’s your role as AZA chair?
My role is to follow through on our strategic plan – to shepherd in the next steps under the plan and to keep things moving in a positive direction. It involves working with the executive committee, the entire board, committee chairs, and the AZA staff who really work to implement the plan.
What’s happening at the leading edge of zoos?
Zoos are being more transparent about what they do and how they do it.
I visited Busch Gardens in Tampa, one of the leaders in our industry, and I was especially impressed with their veterinary hospital. At their Animal Care Centre, people learn about veterinary medicine, observation, diagnostic techniques and treatment in innovative ways. The centre is behind glass and there are scheduled procedures that visitors can watch. It shows the care that goes into maintaining the health of animals in zoos and aquariums, rather than that being a back-of-house function. We need to understand that our guests are interested in how we care for animals and the science behind it.
At San Diego Zoo there’s an elephant programme that’s all carried out in full view of the public. The foot care, the trunk washes, examining their mouths, looking in their ears, drawing blood – it’s all on view.
Many zoos are bringing the training they do to facilitate veterinary care and husbandry up-front, so people can observe it – whether its collecting blood or working on training behaviours.
In Omaha, we can collect blood from the tail of a lion with the lion’s full cooperation. We can collect semen from a gorilla with his full cooperation. We’ve trained a Philippine crocodile, which are very endangered, to donate semen with its full cooperation. We can do heart echoes on a gorilla with its full cooperation without any anaesthesia whatsoever – just through operant conditioning and the use of reward.
In August 2014, TripAdvisor said Omaha Henry Doorly Zoo was the best in the world. How does your zoo engage with the public?
We’re part of the community and the people of Omaha really love their zoo. We engage with people from an early age, and we have high school, kindergarten and after-school programmes to turn children into passionate wildlife protectors.
The zoo is renowned for its conservation efforts. Can you give us some examples?
We have an extensive field programme, in South Africa, and with parks in Swaziland to help rhinos. We have a major field effort in Madagascar and a plant conservation unit that works in Bermuda and the US.
At the zoo, we have our amphibian breeding centre. We’ve been breeding thousands of Houston toads, Puerto Rican crested toads and other amphibians to return to the wild. These are things zoos can do to make a real difference.
It’s still important to us to be a great Saturday afternoon visit for families, and we need to continue that to have a successful financial model, but we understand that we have a greater responsibility to animals in the wild and that zoos and aquariums need to be the reservoir for these assurance populations.
What do you think are the main challenges facing zoos and aquariums?
Having enough space to build these assurance populations in reasonable numbers is a major challenge. Zoos have moved from this postage-stamp collection, where if you had two of something that nobody else had, then that was a really big deal. Now, if you have two of something nobody else has, then it’s a dead end and it doesn’t contribute to sustainability.
Zoos have been working together since 1980 and we’ve been good accountants in putting together stud books, breeding programmes, deciding who should pair with who based on genetics and demographics. What’s changing now is we need to understand those animals that aren’t breeding. Now we can possibly use assisted reproduction technologies or import more founders to strengthen our populations genetically. It’s problem solving.
A perennial challenge is funding. At my zoo I have to fund 89 per cent of the operation. I have to think of ways to generate revenue that aren’t always necessarily related to raising the admission fees. Admission fees at our park are only 25 per cent of our total revenue, while 30 years ago they were almost all of it. By holding the admission fees down, more people can visit, whatever their income.
However, there are many ways to spend money inside the zoo on an elective basis. Exhibits work for us more than eight hours a day now: we host weddings, corporate events, sleepovers at the aquarium and a camp next to the lion exhibit – all ways to make the zoo work after hours.
Do aquariums face the same challenges?
One of the major problems is with breeding and raising fish. We can breed and recover eggs and live young, but it’s very difficult to feed these young fish. In the wild, they eat microscopic plankton among other things that can in and of themselves be difficult to raise. There’s a research effort supported by the University of Florida and Seaworld to develop a way to culture the organisms that the fish will eat.
How would you describe the overall sentiment in the industry?
In the US, visitor numbers are up – 180 million people a year go to accredited zoos in North America. That’s more than all of the professional sports together – football, basketball, baseball: zoos draw more.
They’re educational and it’s family time, but one of the things we’re working on is understanding our responsibility beyond a nice Saturday afternoon, our responsibility to the animals in the wild, and then building public awareness.
I think the public expects us not only to exhibit animals but to be looking out for them in the wild. With the rapid decline right now of species in the wild, the role of zoos is becoming even more important. That’s why the SAFE initiative is so important.