• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 4
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Tapirs and Rhinoceroses in Captivity: An Examination of the North American Captive Populations and their Husbandry

Nordstrom, Lisa A. 01 May 2006 (has links)
A..11 species of Tapiridae and Rhinocerotidae are threatened or endangered in the wild. Captive populations have been established for most of these species, but successful management has proved challenging. Effective ex situ conservation strategies, however, rely on the ability of zoological institutions to maintain and breed these endangered species. In this study, I examined the captive environment to identify the factors associated with reproduction, mortality, and health of rhinos and tapirs. Zoological institutions in the North American region that currently housed rhinos and/or tapirs were surveyed in 2003. Attaining an approximately 90% response rate, I compiled information on the following variables to describe the captive environment: number of enclosures, enclosure type, enclosure area, number of animals, public viewing, percent of walls surrounding the enclosure, enclosure substrate, topography, vegetation, mud wallows, pools, shelters, percent shade, climate, diet, feeding regime, time spent by keepers, and vaccinations. Information regarding the incidence of health problems also was obtained through the survey. Studbook data was used to obtain life history and demographic information. Three species of tapirs [Baird's (Tapirus bairdii), South American (T. terrestris), and Malay (T. indicus)] and three species of rhinos [black (Diceros bicornis), white (Ceratotherium simum), and Indian (Rhinoceros unicornis)] were included in this study. Due to the small captive population sizes, genetic and demographic Allee effects were detected. While tapirs responded similarly to their captive environment, each rhino species responded differently. Both exhibit area and completely were associated with the responses of captive tapirs and rhinos. Climate also was an influential factor for both groups of species. Other key factors included density, diet, keeper time, percent of public perimeter, and vaccinations. Complex interactions among the variables were found, including a nonlinear relationship between mean exhibit size and reproduction for black rhinos. The results of this study can be used to improve the captive management of tapirs and rhinos. By identifying the patterns associated with successful reproduction, reduced mortality, and fewer health problems, we can move towards establishing self-sustaining populations for these species. This goal is critical for the continued husbandry and conservation of these species.
2

Defamiliarising the Zoo : Representations of Nonhuman Animal Captivity in Five Contemporary Novels

Prattley, Hadassa January 2012 (has links)
While human-animal relations have always been part of human cultures the public zoo is a relatively recent phenomenon that reflects very specific elements of Western cultures’ modern ideas about, and relationships with, nonhuman animals. By becoming such a familiar part of popular culture the zoo naturalises these ideas as well as certain modes of looking at and interacting with animals. In this thesis I argue that as literary works contemporary novels provide a valuable defamiliarisation of zoos which encourages the re-examination of the human attitudes and practices that inform our treatment of nonhuman animals. Through my analysis of J.M. Ledgard’s novel 'Giraffe', Diane Hammond’s 'Hannah’s Dream', Lydia Millet’s 'How The Dead Dream', Valerie Martin’s 'The Great Divorce' and Ben Dolnick’s 'Zoology' I explore the inherently anthropocentric social construction of nonhuman animals in human discourses and the way the novels conform to or subvert these processes. I demonstrate that nonhuman animal characters are constructed through a process of identification which involves naming, recognising the existence of their emotions and mediating their nonhuman forms of communication. Anthropocentric tendencies both aid and hinder this identification, for example the human valuing of sight over the other senses that sees eyes become important literary symbols and the gaze a crucial part of interaction and attributing meaning. Gaze and observation are also fundamental to the concept of the zoo where human treatment of nonhuman animals is represented in visual terms in the relationship between powerful spectator and disempowered object. Drawing on texts from multiple disciplines I argue that the anthropocentric nature of socially constructed nonhuman animals in human discourses means that any study of these animals is actually concerned with the human ideologies and processes that create them; as a site of captivity that markets wildness and freedom the paradoxical nature of the zoo provides the literary setting for an exploration of these themes.
3

Comportamento em cativeiro e teste da eficácia de técnicas de enriquecimento ambiental (físico e alimentar) para jaguatiricas (Leopardus pardalis) / Captivity behavior and evaluation of two environmental enrichment procedures for ocelots (Leopardus pardalis)

Hashimoto, Claudia Yumi 25 April 2008 (has links)
O Brasil possui grande diversidade de felinos selvagens e a maioria destes animais encontra-se ameaçada de extinção. A reprodução em cativeiro é ferramenta essencial para a conservação de espécies como felinos e, em geral, está diretamente relacionada ao bem-estar animal. O presente projeto objetivou o estudo do comportamento em cativeiro da jaguatirica (Leopardus pardalis), enfocando possíveis comportamentos anormais indicativos de condições ambientais sub-ótimas, e o teste de dois protocolos de enriquecimento ambiental (físico e alimentar), visando um melhor entendimento das necessidades desta espécie em cativeiro e a proposição de técnicas de manejo mais adequadas. Para tanto analisamos parâmetros comportamentais (método de varredura) e endócrinos (metabólitos fecais de corticosterona) de 12 indivíduos adultos e cativos na Associação Mata Ciliar, Jundiaí/SP. Com a análise conjunta dos dados de todos os indivíduos não foi possível sustentar a hipótese de influência do tratamento sobre o bem-estar, mas os resultados apontam para influências sazonais sob o comportamento dos animais (temperatura e fotoperíodo) e para um possível efeito danoso da remoção/interrupção do tratamento sobre o bem-estar. A análise individual também apontou, em alguns casos, para este efeito maléfico da remoção do tratamento e para resultados positivos quando se aplicam técnicas de enriquecimento ambiental, como redução da freqüência de comportamentos anormais, aumento do comportamento social não-agonista e redução da concentração de metabólitos de glicocorticóides. Foi encontrada ainda correlação positiva entre a concentração de metabólitos de corticosterona e comportamentos anormais. Dada a importância prática desta linha de pesquisa e a escassez de trabalhos com pequenos felinos brasileiros em cativeiro, apresentamos ainda algumas sugestões metodológicas para futuros experimentos. / Brazil exhibits a large variety of wild cat species, most of which under the threat of extinction. Reproduction in captivity is an essential tool for the conservation of these species, and it is directly linked to animal welfare. This project aimed the study of the behavior of the ocelot (a small-sized American wild cat; Leopardus pardalis under captivity, looking for potential abnormal behavior indicative of sub-optimal environmental conditions, and the testing of two environmental enrichment procedures (physical and alimentary) in search of a better understanding of this species\' needs in captivity and of better management techniques. For that, we analyzed behavioral (scan sampling) and endocrinal data (fecal corticosterone metabolites) from 12 adult captive individuais in the facilities of the Associação Mata Ciliar (Jundiaí, SP, Brazil). The analysis of data for the whole sample did not support the hypothesis predicting an influence of the environment enrichment procedures on the animals\' welfare, but pointed to seasonal influences on behavior, and to a possible harmful effect of the removal/interruption of the treatment on the welfare. The individual data analysis also pointed, in some cases, to a harmful effect of treatment removal, as well as to some positive results of the application of the environmental enrichment procedures, such as the reduction on the frequencies of abnormal behavior, a rise in non-agonist social behavior, and a reduction in the concentration levels of corticosteroid metabolites. We also found a positive correlation between concentration levels of corticosterone metabolites and abnormal behavior. Finally, given the practical relevance of this line of research and the lack of studies on small cats under captivity, we formulate some methodological suggestions for future research.
4

Comportamento em cativeiro e teste da eficácia de técnicas de enriquecimento ambiental (físico e alimentar) para jaguatiricas (Leopardus pardalis) / Captivity behavior and evaluation of two environmental enrichment procedures for ocelots (Leopardus pardalis)

Claudia Yumi Hashimoto 25 April 2008 (has links)
O Brasil possui grande diversidade de felinos selvagens e a maioria destes animais encontra-se ameaçada de extinção. A reprodução em cativeiro é ferramenta essencial para a conservação de espécies como felinos e, em geral, está diretamente relacionada ao bem-estar animal. O presente projeto objetivou o estudo do comportamento em cativeiro da jaguatirica (Leopardus pardalis), enfocando possíveis comportamentos anormais indicativos de condições ambientais sub-ótimas, e o teste de dois protocolos de enriquecimento ambiental (físico e alimentar), visando um melhor entendimento das necessidades desta espécie em cativeiro e a proposição de técnicas de manejo mais adequadas. Para tanto analisamos parâmetros comportamentais (método de varredura) e endócrinos (metabólitos fecais de corticosterona) de 12 indivíduos adultos e cativos na Associação Mata Ciliar, Jundiaí/SP. Com a análise conjunta dos dados de todos os indivíduos não foi possível sustentar a hipótese de influência do tratamento sobre o bem-estar, mas os resultados apontam para influências sazonais sob o comportamento dos animais (temperatura e fotoperíodo) e para um possível efeito danoso da remoção/interrupção do tratamento sobre o bem-estar. A análise individual também apontou, em alguns casos, para este efeito maléfico da remoção do tratamento e para resultados positivos quando se aplicam técnicas de enriquecimento ambiental, como redução da freqüência de comportamentos anormais, aumento do comportamento social não-agonista e redução da concentração de metabólitos de glicocorticóides. Foi encontrada ainda correlação positiva entre a concentração de metabólitos de corticosterona e comportamentos anormais. Dada a importância prática desta linha de pesquisa e a escassez de trabalhos com pequenos felinos brasileiros em cativeiro, apresentamos ainda algumas sugestões metodológicas para futuros experimentos. / Brazil exhibits a large variety of wild cat species, most of which under the threat of extinction. Reproduction in captivity is an essential tool for the conservation of these species, and it is directly linked to animal welfare. This project aimed the study of the behavior of the ocelot (a small-sized American wild cat; Leopardus pardalis under captivity, looking for potential abnormal behavior indicative of sub-optimal environmental conditions, and the testing of two environmental enrichment procedures (physical and alimentary) in search of a better understanding of this species\' needs in captivity and of better management techniques. For that, we analyzed behavioral (scan sampling) and endocrinal data (fecal corticosterone metabolites) from 12 adult captive individuais in the facilities of the Associação Mata Ciliar (Jundiaí, SP, Brazil). The analysis of data for the whole sample did not support the hypothesis predicting an influence of the environment enrichment procedures on the animals\' welfare, but pointed to seasonal influences on behavior, and to a possible harmful effect of the removal/interruption of the treatment on the welfare. The individual data analysis also pointed, in some cases, to a harmful effect of treatment removal, as well as to some positive results of the application of the environmental enrichment procedures, such as the reduction on the frequencies of abnormal behavior, a rise in non-agonist social behavior, and a reduction in the concentration levels of corticosteroid metabolites. We also found a positive correlation between concentration levels of corticosterone metabolites and abnormal behavior. Finally, given the practical relevance of this line of research and the lack of studies on small cats under captivity, we formulate some methodological suggestions for future research.

Page generated in 0.0813 seconds