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Conservation by Captive Breeding: a General Survey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2009
Extract
Breeding rare animals in captivity is only a second best but essential if they cannot be preserved in the wild, and in this zoos have an important part to play. Richard Fitter, hon. secretary of the Fauna Preservation Society, describes some of the most successful captive breeding programmes so far—Pére David's deer, European bison, Przewalski wild horse and Arabian oryx—and urges zoos to give serious attention now to the more difficult tasks of breeding primates and carnivores, of which several species, notably orang utans and the larger apes are endangered. He also suggests that zoos should anticipate the day when species now common become rare by establishing captive breeding programmes that would make them self-supporting in these animals.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1967
References
* In Oryx, December, 1966, an account of a new sighting of Przewalski's horses in western Mongolia in the summer of 1966, is described by Dr. Z. Kaszab. Editor.
* This has now been done: photographs on plates 9 and 10, following page 116.
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