keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38540047/minding-the-minds-a-primer-on-cognitive-challenge-for-marine-mammals-in-human-care
#21
REVIEW
Kelly Jaakkola
The past several decades have witnessed significant improvement in the physical welfare of marine mammals in zoos and aquariums. Over that same time period, research has revealed complex cognitive abilities in at least some of these species, yet there has been comparatively little attention paid to addressing their cognitive welfare per se. Studies primarily conducted with terrestrial animals have suggested that providing appropriate cognitive challenges in managed care settings can improve animal well-being...
March 19, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38540024/-shark-dive-and-hologram-zoo-two-case-studies-of-virtual-animal-encounters-as-possible-models-for-sustainable-wildlife-tourism
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Scollen, Andrew Mason
Wildlife tourism is commonly argued to positively contribute to nature conservation by providing humans with educational and meaningful first-hand experiences with animals. However, concern for the sustainability of nature due to the negative impacts of wildlife tourism on animals and the environment invites alternative virtual opportunities for close encounters. Participant Observation framed by an Animal Studies perspective is employed to interpret two contemporary Australian family entertainments, Shark Dive and Hologram Zoo , centred on providing people with wild animal interactions but without real animals present...
March 17, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38540021/zoo-visitors-most-liked-aspects-of-elephant-encounters-and-related-perceptions-of-animals-emotions-and-welfare-states-a-pragmatic-approach
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angela M Lacinak
Zoos strive to provide excellent welfare for resident animals, including those belonging to endangered species involved in captive breeding programs while addressing visitors' concerns regarding the ethics of captivity. Zoos also rely on income and support from visitors to provide exceptional care for their animal residents. It is essential, therefore, that zoos consider how visitors perceive their animals' well-being, including physical and psychological welfare. This pragmatic, qualitative research explores the aspects of training-focused enrichment activities provided for a resident herd of African elephants ( Loxodonta africana ) that visitors liked/disliked, and it assesses perceptions of the animals' emotions and welfare...
March 17, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38539951/epidemiology-and-molecular-characterization-of-zoonotic-gastrointestinal-protozoal-infection-in-zoo-animals-in-china
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diya An, Tingting Jiang, Changsheng Zhang, Lei Ma, Ting Jia, Yanqun Pei, Zifu Zhu, Qun Liu, Jing Liu
Zoo animals, harboring zoonotic gastrointestinal protozoal diseases, pose potential hazards to the safety of visitors and animal keepers. This study involved the collection and examination of 400 fresh fecal samples from 68 animal species, obtained from five zoos. The aim of this study was to determine the occurrence, genetic characteristics, and zoonotic potential of common gastrointestinal protists. PCR or nested PCR analysis was conducted on these samples to detect four specific parasites: Cryptosporidium spp...
March 10, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38539919/matching-to-sample-task-training-of-a-killer-whale-orcinus-orca
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ayumu Santa, Koji Kanda, Tomoya Kako, Momoko Miyajima, Ikuma Adachi
Matching-to-sample tasks have been a useful method in visual cognitive studies on non-human animals. The use of touch panels in matching-to-sample tasks has contributed to cognitive studies on terrestrial animals; however, there has been a difficulty in using these devices underwater, which is one of the factors that has slowed the progress of visual studies on underwater animals. Cetaceans (e.g., dolphins and whales) are highly adapted to underwater environments, and further studies on their cognitive abilities are needed to advance our understanding of the interactions between environmental factors and the evolution of cognitive abilities...
March 7, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38539278/positive-clinical-experience-with-paromomycin-sulfate-in-treatment-of-balantioides-coli-balantidium-coli-natural-infection-in-zoo-kept-mandrill-monkeys-mandrillus-sphinx-and-western-lowland-gorillas-gorilla-gorilla-gorilla
#26
Hen Zakai, Elad Smit, David Eshar
Balantioides coli (=Balantidium coli), a large ciliated protozoan, is reported in multiple free-ranging and captive primate species, often in association with a clinical presentation that requires medical intervention. This report describes the clinical effectiveness of paromomycin sulfate against B.coli in zoo-kept mandrill monkeys (Mandrillus sphinx, at orally doses of 8-31 mg/kg, once daily (SID) for 7 days) and gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla, at orally doses of 1.4-3.1 mg/kg, SID for 5 days)...
April 2024: Journal of Medical Primatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533454/spider-webs-capture-environmental-dna-from-terrestrial-vertebrates
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joshua P Newton, Paul Nevill, Philip W Bateman, Matthew A Campbell, Morten E Allentoft
Environmental DNA holds significant promise as a non-invasive tool for tracking terrestrial biodiversity. However, in non-homogenous terrestrial environments, the continual exploration of new substrates is crucial. Here we test the hypothesis that spider webs can act as passive biofilters, capturing eDNA from vertebrates present in the local environment. Using a metabarcoding approach, we detected vertebrate eDNA from all analyzed spider webs (N = 49). Spider webs obtained from an Australian woodland locality yielded vertebrate eDNA from 32 different species, including native mammals and birds...
February 16, 2024: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533336/maintaining-the-native-gut-microbiota-of-bharal-pseudois-nayaur-is-crucial-in-ex-situ-conservation
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hongmei Gao, Xiangwen Chi, Pengfei Song, Haifeng Gu, Bo Xu, Zhenyuan Cai, Feng Jiang, Bin Li, Tongzuo Zhang
As wildlife protection continue to strengthen, research on the gut microbiota of wildlife is increasing. Carrying out conservation and research on endangered species in the Qinghai Tibet Plateau plays an important role in global biodiversity conservation. This study utilized 16S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples to investigate the composition, function, and changes of the gut microbiota of bharal in different environments, seasons, and genders. The results showed that Firmicutes and Bacteroidota were the dominant phyla and UCG-005 , Bacteroides , UCG-010 were the dominant genera of bharal...
2024: Frontiers in Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38532794/comparison-of-animal-welfare-assessment-tools-and-methodologies-need-for-an-effective-approach-for-captive-elephants-in-asia
#29
REVIEW
Raman Ghimire, Janine L Brown, Chatchote Thitaram, Pakkanut Bansiddhi
Welfare is a fundamental aspect of animal management and conservation. In light of growing public awareness and welfare concerns about captive elephants, there is an urgent need for comprehensive, globally coordinated efforts for Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) that participate in religious, logging, or tourist activities in range countries where the majority reside, and where welfare issues have been identified but not addressed. This review provides a comparative analysis of available animal assessment tools...
2024: Frontiers in Veterinary Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38529876/weight-as-an-indicator-of-enclosure-suitability-in-livingstone-s-fruit-bats-pteropus-livingstonii
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eluned C Price, Alex Roberts, Laura Bennett, Gale Glendewar, Dominic Wormell
Obesity is common in zoo animals, and both dietary management and the provision of adequate opportunities for exercise are needed to tackle it. We used 30 years of records from Jersey Zoo to compare the weight and forearm length of wild and captive-born Livingstone's fruit bats (Pteropus livingstonii), and to assess the impact on weight of enclosure space. The mean capture weight of wild-caught male Livingstone's bats was 657 g, significantly higher than that of females (544 g). In both wild and captive-born bats, males had significantly longer forearms than females, but there was no effect of birth location...
March 26, 2024: Zoo Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38526306/link-between-monkeypox-virus-genomes-from-museum-specimens-and-1965-zoo-outbreak
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michelle Hämmerle, Aigerim Rymbekova, Pere Gelabert, Susanna Sawyer, Olivia Cheronet, Paolo Bernardi, Sébastien Calvignac-Spencer, Martin Kuhlwilm, Meriam Guellil, Ron Pinhasi
We used pathogen genomics to test orangutan specimens from a museum in Bonn, Germany, to identify the origin of the animals and the circumstances of their death. We found monkeypox virus genomes in the samples and determined that they represent cases from a 1965 outbreak at Rotterdam Zoo in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
April 2024: Emerging Infectious Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38518717/development-and-validation-of-a-versatile-non-invasive-urinary-steroidomics-method-for-wildlife-biomonitoring
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tom Cools, Kirsten S Wilson, Desheng Li, Catherine Vancsok, Baptiste Mulot, Antoine Leclerc, José Kok, Marko Haapakoski, Mads F Bertelsen, Andreas Ochs, Simon J Girling, Yingmin Zhou, Rengui Li, Lynn Vanhaecke, Jella Wauters
Wildlife conservation is often challenged by a lack of knowledge about the reproduction biology and adaptability of endangered species. Although monitoring steroids and related molecules can increase this knowledge, the applicability of current techniques (e.g. immunoassays) is hampered by species-specific steroid metabolism and the requisite to avoid invasive sampling. This study presents a validated steroidomics method for the (un)targeted screening of a wide range of sex and stress steroids and related molecules in urine using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS)...
March 19, 2024: Talanta
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38515029/first-reported-human-case-of-isolation-of-vagococcus-fluvialis-from-the-urine-of-a-former-zoo-clerk-in-japan-a-case-report
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hiroyuki Kitano, Hiroki Kitagawa, Kayoko Tadera, Kohei Saito, Yuki Kohada, Kenshiro Takemoto, Kohei Kobatake, Yohei Sekino, Keisuke Hieda, Hiroki Ohge, Nobuyuki Hinata
BACKGROUND: Vagococcal infections are extremely rare in humans. There are limited studies on the optimal methods for identification, antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and clinical manifestations of vagococcal infections. Herein, we report a patient with a urinary tract infection who had Vagococcus fluvialis in the urine. CASE PRESENTATION: An 84-year-old man presented to our urology department with a fever that had persisted for several days. He previously worked as a zoo clerk...
March 21, 2024: BMC Infectious Diseases
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38500531/mammal-dung-dung-beetle-trophic-networks-an-improved-method-based-on-gut-content-dna
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Karen M Pedersen, Christoph von Beeren, Arianna Oggioni, Nico Blüthgen
BACKGROUND: Dung beetles provide many important ecosystem services, including dung decomposition, pathogen control, soil aeration, and secondary seed dispersal. Yet, the biology of most dung beetles remains unknown. Natural diets are poorly studied, partly because previous research has focused on choice or attraction experiments using few, easily accessible dung types from zoo animals, farm animals, or humans. This way, many links within natural food webs have certainly been missed. In this work, we aimed to establish a protocol to analyze the natural diets of dung beetles using DNA gut barcoding...
2024: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38497435/the-effects-of-anthropogenic-noise-on-frogs-housed-on-exhibit-at-a-public-aquarium
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colette Angel, Michael Romano, Charles R Knapp
Anuran behavior and reproduction are dominated by vocalizations, rendering them vulnerable to the effects of signal masking. For anurans on display in zoos and aquaria, a major source of ambient noise is visitors, which pose a unique source of potential anthropogenic signal masking. Call characteristics (total call duration, and minimum and maximum call frequencies) of three populations of dendrobatids (Dendrobates leucomelas, Epipedobates tricolor, and Ranitomeya imitator) on public display were investigated at time periods of increasing visitor-related noise (closed, off-peak, and peak aquarium visiting hours) to determine if there were changes in call characteristics that correlated with changes in visitor noise levels...
March 18, 2024: Zoo Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38482887/sex-identification-of-birds-in-taipei-zoo
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cheng-Wei Liu, Hsuan-Yi Hou, Hsin-I Hsieh, Nian-Hong Jang-Liaw
As a conservation and breeding institution for birds, Taipei Zoo plays an important role in restoring endangered species. As approximately half of all bird species are monomorphic, precisely confirming the sex of individuals is critical for the management of ex-situ conservation breeding populations, as well as for understanding the sex ratio of those in the wild. Generally, PCR is used more reliably for sex determination versus traditional methods such as plumage, behavior or hormone levels. Nevertheless, the various primer sets and annealing temperatures vary between species, and so inaccurate sexing can occasionally happen due to inadequate PCR conditions...
March 14, 2024: Zoo Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38473198/wild-animals-in-captivity-an-analysis-of-parasite-biodiversity-and-transmission-among-animals-at-two-zoological-institutions-with-different-typologies
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lorena Esteban-Sánchez, Juan José García-Rodríguez, Juncal García-García, Eva Martínez-Nevado, Manuel Antonio de la Riva-Fraga, Francisco Ponce-Gordo
We have conducted a 10-year-long coprological study of the animals housed in two zoological institutions (ZooAquarium and Faunia, Madrid, Spain) to assess the parasite biodiversity, prevalence, and their relation with host class, diet, and enclosure type (soil type and level of isolation from wild fauna). A total of 4476 faecal samples from 132 mammal species and 951 samples from 86 avian species were examined. The results indicated that only 12.8% of avian species had parasites at least once during the study period, whereas 62...
March 6, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38473121/a-reexamination-of-the-relationship-between-training-practices-and-welfare-in-the-management-of-ambassador-animals
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steve Martin, Grey Stafford, David S Miller
There is an ethical need to document and develop best practices for meeting ambassador animals' welfare needs within the context of meeting zoo and aquarium program objectives. This is because ambassador animals experience direct and frequent contact with humans. This paper rigorously synthesizes behavioral research and theory, contemporary practices, and personal experiences to offer key concepts that can be applied to meet ambassador animal welfare needs. These key concepts include addressing an animal's recognition of choice and control, the use of the most positive and least intrusive effective interventions when training animals to participate in programming, and an overall reduction in aversive strategy use...
February 27, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38473086/dolphin-wet-development-of-a-welfare-evaluation-tool-for-bottlenose-dolphins-tursiops-truncatus-under-human-care
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katrin Baumgartner, Tim Hüttner, Isabella L K Clegg, Manuel Garcia Hartmann, Daniel Garcia-Párraga, Xavier Manteca, Birgitta Mercera, Tania Monreal-Pawlowsky, Cristina Pilenga, Kerstin Ternes, Oriol Tallo-Parra, Ruta Vaicekauskaite, Lorenzo von Fersen, Lisa Yon, Fabienne Delfour
Ensuring high standards of animal welfare is not only an ethical duty for zoos and aquariums, but it is also essential to achieve their conservation, education, and research goals. While for some species, animal welfare assessment frameworks are already in place, little has been done for marine animals under human care. Responding to this demand, the welfare committee of the European Association for Aquatic Mammals (EAAM) set up a group of experts on welfare science, cetacean biology, and zoo animal medicine across Europe...
February 23, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467303/anxiety-symptoms-in-young-children-are-associated-with-a-maladaptive-neurobehavioral-profile-of-error-responding
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ann M Iturra-Mena, Jason Moser, Dana E Díaz, Sherry Y H Chen, Katherine Rosenblum, Maria Muzik, Kate D Fitzgerald
BACKGROUND: Childhood anxiety symptoms have been linked with alterations in cognitive control and error-processing, yet the diverse findings on neural markers of anxiety in young children, varying by severity and developmental stages, suggest a need for a wider perspective. Integrating new neural markers with established ones like the Error-Related Negativity (ERN), the Error Positivity (Pe) and frontal theta, could clarify this association. Error-Related Alpha Suppression (ERAS) is a recently proposed index of post-error attentional engagement not yet explored in anxious children...
March 9, 2024: Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging
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