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AAP Minimum Husbandry Guidelines: Chimpanzee Social introductions must be carefully considered, according to appropriate techniques. Environment Theoretical conclusion → Biological need to perform natural locomotion behaviour (e.g. climbing). → Biological need for shelter from sun/rain/wind/cold.
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The EAZA Code of Ethics and Conduct also requires Members to observe a few documents from the International Union for Conservation of Nature and World Association of Zoos and Aquariums. You can find these documents here. More information about how the documents relate to each other.
1 août 2018 · EAZA Best Practice Guidelines are produced by the various Taxon Advisory Groups (TAGs) to merge expert husbandry knowledge and make it widely available within and outside the borders of the EAZA community. The guidelines displayed below show best practice standards, which EAZA zoos aim at achieving. They have been compiled using a ...
Husbandry Manuals provide a wealth of best-practice information based on the collective experience of AZA facilities. The following taxon-specific documents are a valuable resource in the husbandry and care of ungulates.
the highest possible standards for husbandry of zoo and aquarium animals. For this reason, quite early on, EAZA developed the ^Minimum Standards for the Accommodation and are of Animals in Zoos and Aquaria. These standards lay down general principles of animal keeping, to which the members of EAZA feel themselves committed. Above and beyond ...
Whilst some aspects of husbandry reported in the guidelines will define minimum standards, in general, these guidelines are not to be understood as minimum requirements; they represent best practice. As such the EAZA Best Practice Guidelines for keeping animals intend rather to describe the desirable design of enclosures and prerequisites for ...
These Best Practice Husbandry Guidelines follow the template suggested by EAZA for all their EEPs. The first section gives a detailed overview of our current knowledge on biology of the bonobo, based mainly on published research, to a lesser degree on information from PhD studies that were not always published or small articles from the “grey ...