Liz Bonnin investigates how and why zoos keep animals and looks at whether they need to change to keep up with modern science.
Liz Bonnin presents a controversial and provocative episode of Horizon, investigating how new scientific research is raising hard questions about zoos - the film explores how and why zoos keep animals, and whether they need to change to keep up with modern science or ultimately be consigned to history.
Should zoos cull their animals to manage populations? Liz travels to Copenhagen Zoo, who killed a giraffe and fed it to the lions, to witness their culling process first hand. They think it is a natural part of zoo keeping that is often swept under the carpet. Should some animals never be kept in captivity? In a world exclusive, Liz visits SeaWorld in Florida and asks if captivity drove one of their orcas to kill his trainer.
But could zoos be the answer to conserving endangered species? Liz examines their record, from helping breed pandas for the wild to efforts to save the rhinos. She meets one of the last surviving northern white rhinos and discovers the future of this species now lies in a multimillion-dollar programme to engineer them from stem cells. Veteran conservation scientist Dr Sarah Bexell tells Liz the science of captive breeding is giving humanity false hope.
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Clips
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Should we close our zoos?
Duration: 05:04
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Zoos by numbers
Duration: 00:49
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The future of zoos
Duration: 01:32
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Trail - Should we close our zoos?
Duration: 02:17
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Liz Bonnin |
Director | Tristan Quinn |
Producer | Tristan Quinn |
Series Editor | Steve Crabtree |
Broadcasts
- Sun 17 Apr 2016 21:00
- Thu 21 Apr 2016 01:05
- Fri 19 Aug 2016 02:35