If you were alive at all on Twitter yesterday, you could not
escape photos of Marius, the young giraffe at the Copenhagen Zoo.
Zoo management considered Marius surplus to requirements in terms
of his genetic structure (already represented in the zoo’s population) and
space at the facility. So on Sunday, they did as they’d announced earlier: they
killed Marius, dismembered his corpse and fed him to the lions.
Oh—they did it publicly, in front of zoo visitors. Just like an
old-fashioned public execution.
(No, I'm not showing or linking to them. You want to see them, you
can Google for yourself.)
I’ve got to say that I stick at some of the images; zoo officials
called it educational, but I’m not sure that the kids got the lesson they
intended.
Marius was apparently a victim of EU regulations—the laws under
which the Copenhagen Zoo operates prohibit transfer of animals outside of the
organization of zoos it belongs to. So even though other zoos offered to take
him, Copenhagen turned them down.
There were apparently private would-be buyers, too; but I don’t
want to think about what some of those people wanted with a beautiful young
animal already written off by those who are supposed to look out for him.
Copenhagen refused them as well.
Both NPR and CNN refer to Marius’ end as “euthanizing”,
which is bizarre. Euthanasia is the practice of intentionally ending a life in
order to relieve pain and suffering. Marius was 18 months old, perfectly
healthy and could have lived a long and happy giraffe life for another 24 years
or so. The pain that was being ended was to Copenhagen Zoo’s finances and their
breeding program.
I’ll confess that zoos make me uneasy. I outright loathe circuses—the
idea of wild animals capering about to entertain humans makes me retch. But
when I think about zoos I can’t help but feel that the wrong species are behind
the bars.
A few months ago I exchanged such thoughts with a guy on Twitter.
(And, BTW—steeplechase? No.) I had mild reservations about zoos being completely pernicious precisely because
of their animal conservation programs. You know, they were ensuring the continuation of animals under assault from human civilization.
And then came Marius.
it’s interesting to me that the Copenhagen Zoo didn’t foresee the
vehement reaction from around the world. I also think it’s passing strange
that, with the population
of giraffes in Africa declining, zoo breeding programs aren’t capable of
offloading their “surplus” back into the wild instead of slaughtering them for
a Sunday outing.
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