animals in captivity essay

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    Issue: Animals in zoos, circuses, aquariums and circuses. Position: Animals should not be kept in captivity such as zoos, aquariums, or circuses. Animals should not be kept in captivity such as zoos, aquariums, or circuses. Keeping animals away from their home, the wild, has sown no educational benefits. It is not safe for the animals nor the people visiting zoos. There is not much entertainment being gained from it either since visitors only spend a few minutes or even seconds taunting or glancing

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    having wild animals kept in captivity. It also explains why keeping animals isolated and away from their natural habitat with no freedom is inhumane. There is no educational benefit from keeping them away from the wild which is their home. It is not safe for the animals nor the people visiting the zoos. In the past few years, there has been over seven cases where a person was attacked or fatally killed by a wild captive animal. Many people blame the animals for everything, but a wild animal that was

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    Animals raised in captivity are the most unfortunate of all. They go through grave conditions with no chance of survival. Over 3000 animals die per second due to slaughter. Over 56 billion die because of slaughter per year (www.animalequality.net/food). The consternation behind the walls of slaughterhouses will leave you dumbfounded. The way animals are treated is atrocious. Animals raised in captivity are treated bestially from the time their born to the time they die. Pigs are one of the strongest

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    Studying animals in captivity allows scientists to achieve up-close research that cannot be obtained from animals in the wild. Seaworld helps “provide researchers the unique advantage of animals that are trained and able to cooperate”.This type of research is crucial to protect the species in the ocean, especially those that are endangered. Observing captive animals can be done on a daily basis for longer periods of time. It also gives researchers a “controlled setting for science that is impossible

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    Animals In Captivity The debate about whether zoos are being a good thing or a bad thing for the animals of the wild has been going on for several years. There are many theories and thoughts that people have on this topic. It is a very touchy topic for some people, whether they are for or against, and some people have other things that are more important to them making the topic irrelevant. After doing some research, I found that there are more pros than cons to having wild animals live in zoos.

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    “Animals in captivity are affected by extreme boredom, lack of appropriate exercise, poor quality food and a lack of variety of food, especially in poorly run facilities” (Education Reform, Choo). Imagine you got ripped out of your home and put in a small cage with no interaction with other animals and terrible food. You have no idea what's going on and what's going to happen to you, that's was animal's face everyday in captivity. Animals in captivity are abandoned and not fed the right foods, they

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    Wild Animals Should NOT Be Kept in Captivity

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    our planet. As humans, and the superior species on Earth, we put exotic animals, aquatic and terrestrial, in zoos or aquariums where people can go to see them to learn more about them in order to protect them. It just so happens that by putting these animals into captivity, we are causing more damage to them, just as damage is occurring in the wild and more species are becoming extinct. Animals should not be held in captivity; it does not save them from going extinct, but helps kill them off. The

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    ancient Egypt. The more animals a ruler had in their possession, the more powerful of a leader it proved them to be. For thousands of year humans have kept the idea of caging animals up and displaying them, but has the concept become outdated? In our current age, countries are proven powerful by their military and economy, not by the amount of animals held captive in their zoos. The purpose of zoos has shifted from showcasing the power of rulers, to simply showcasing animals for the entertainment of

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    Throughout the years, the issue of captivity has been frequently used among researchers. In the early day’s researchers focused on the social affects captivity has on wild animals. However, the focus of research has shifted from studying the social behaviors of captive animals and moved on to considering how captivity affects biological behaviors. Recent research has shown that captivity not only affects the social behaviors of animals but also their biological behaviors. Over the year’s researchers

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    Captivity For Animals During the 1960’s at the Saint Louis Zoo a chimpanzee named Edith took her first breath. The public gave a lot of attention, mainly because she was a newborn. She was cuddly, cute and small. As young as 3 years old, she was taken away from her family and passed around at least five facilities, finally landing at a Texas roadside zoo called Amarillo Wildlife Refuge. During an undercover investigation of Amarillo Wildlife Refuge, PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals)

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