John Wiley & Sons A Guide to Managing Zoo Animal Welfare Cover Comprehensive reference detailing behavioral assessment techniques, behavioral approaches, and pract.. Product #: 978-1-118-88480-5 Regular price: $52.24 $52.24 Auf Lager

A Guide to Managing Zoo Animal Welfare

A Behavioral Approach

Watters, Jason / Krebs, Bethany L.

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1. Auflage Februar 2025
224 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-118-88480-5
John Wiley & Sons

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Comprehensive reference detailing behavioral assessment techniques, behavioral approaches, and practical tools for animal welfare across different species

A Guide to Managing Zoo Animal Welfare delivers a step-by-step guide to behavioral assessment approaches, techniques, and tools for animal welfare with an emphasis on animals living in zoos and aquaria. The authors develop a unique "balance-based" approach that can be used to assess and enhance the welfare of a diverse range of species. Backed by extensive scientific literature, this book also provides foundational context to help readers to understand why the authors give these recommendations and guidelines.

This book is divided into three sections. Section I details background concepts and goals, discussing the animal mind through neuroscience, psychology, and behavior, even questioning wild animal behavior's validity as a template for captive animal behavior. Section II details the core behavioral Needs of animals, investigating, acquiring rewards, and exerting control. Section III explains how to practically assess if animals' Needs are met and address deficiencies, covering topics like food, space, and social rewards and methods to make environments dynamic.

A Guide to Managing Zoo Animal Welfare includes information on:

* Proximate and ultimate reasoning for the existence of each of the Needs

* Welfare benefits of meeting the Needs, including positive affect, maintaining homeostasis, passing on genes, and learning through reinforcement

* The highly variable personalities of individual animals and different animal species, as well as why personality is an important facet of animal welfare

* A guide for assessing animal welfare using the Three Needs model

Presenting highly unique insight and a novel approach, A Guide to Managing Zoo Animal Welfare is an essential learning resource for professional animal behaviorists in zoos and aquaria, researchers in animal behavior and animal welfare, and students in veterinary sciences and zoology programs of study.

Chapter 1: Background Concepts and Goals

Chapter 2: Is Wild Animal Behavior a Proper Template for Captive Animal Behavior?

Chapter 3: Investigating

Chapter 4: Acquiring Reward

Chapter 5: Exerting Control

Chapter 6: Balance: Good Welfare Through Psychological Resilience

Chapter 7: Animal Personality: For Every Animal, All Needs Are Important, But They Are Not Equal

Chapter 8: What It Looks Like When The Needs Are Met And Not Met

Chapter 9: Assessment: Asking Animals, 'Are Your Need Met?'

Chapter 10: A Practitioner's Guide to Meeting the Needs

Chapter 11: Exceptional Cases: Geriatric, Chronically and Acutely Ill, and Injured Animals

Chapter 12: Scenarios
Jason Watters, Adjunct Associate Professor, Animal Science, University of California, Davis, California, USA.

Bethany L. Krebs, Executive Editor of Zoo Biology, San Francisco, California, USA.

J. Watters, University of California, Davis, CA, USA; B. L. Krebs, Executive Editor of Zoo Biology, San Francisco, CA, USA