Weekend Herald - Canvas

CAPTIVE AUDIENCE

Auckland Zoo’s new director on why there is still a place for zoos

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He was “probably” hung-over. A young man, sitting in a laboratory, reviewing footage of a burrow-nesting mountain chicken frog.

Once, when Kevin Buley was an unqualifie­d high school biology teacher on a gap year in the Caribbean, he had feasted on this giant frog. It was a national delicacy. They served it at his leaving dinner.

How did it taste?

“Like ... chicken?” But he can’t really remember. His big moment with one of the world’s biggest frogs was yet to come.

Because now, Buley has a degree in zoology and animal biology. He has a job at Gerald Durrell’s Jersey Zoo, working with reptiles and amphibians. And he’s trying to solve a mystery.

Regular frogs release 30,000-50,000 eggs. The mountain chicken frog lays just 30-50. It is a frog that has been hunted and eaten and threatened by fungal disease. A volcano has blown on Montserrat and ash is smothering its habitat. Three females and six males have been transferre­d to a captive breeding programme at Jersey Zoo. Nobody knows whether this mercy mission will work, because because nobody really knows how these things breed or grow, undergroun­d on their foamy nests.

“How do you get from a 1.5mm egg to a 15cm tadpole?” asks Buley. “They spend their whole lives in this nest, until metamorpho­sis, when they come out as baby frogs ... ”

So zoo staff recreate burrows with drainpipes and plastic boxes. It’s the 1990s, the video camera system is primitive, but: “I can still remember. I was probably quite hung over. I remember coming in and watching this female sitting on the nest and she was feeding her tadpoles through what we later coined as ‘butt milk’. She was laying less than 100 eggs, but what she was actually doing was retaining tens of thousands more of them, and then using them to provision the nest.

“What I saw that morning was these tadpoles in a feeding frenzy, literally around her backside. The eggs were being squirted out, and the tadpoles were fighting each other and it was just incredible.” And that, says Buley, is the bit that gets you. “You’re looking at that and suddenly your hangover is gone and suddenly it’s like, ‘Oh my God — I’m the first person on the planet to have ever seen this.’”

LAST JUNE, Buley became the director of Auckland Zoo. Sitting in his office, listening to this career-defining story, it’s impossible not to get goosebumps. This is not a grand saga of lions and tigers, or a cute tale about a Nepalese red panda cub. No zoo ever ran a competitio­n to name a tadpole. Who cares about frogs?

“For the first time, our work in the zoo was able to inform both the Montserrat and Dominican government­s that having a hunting season that avoided these animals when they are breeding, would automatica­lly protect the species.

“The work you do in a zoo, the research and the science and the finding stuff out, has a direct impact on conserving species. That’s why I cared.”

The word Buley thinks best describes this ethos has, he says “no real equivalent in English, but it’s kaitiakita­nga [guardiansh­ip and protection]. And I think, with that, we’re getting onto the essence of what zoos — a good, modern zoo — is all about.”

In 2015, when a keeper died after being mauled by a tiger in Hamilton Zoo, animal rights group Peta (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) said it was “saddened but not surprised”, because zoos gave people “the false idea that these animals are little more than cuddly kitties who can be used and abused for our entertainm­ent”. Zoos were a “living hell” denying animals the ability to “engage in any of the activities that give their lives meaning”.

New Zealand’s SAFE (Save Animals From Exploitati­on) recommends learning about wildlife through nature documentar­ies and the internet: “Do not go to zoos or wildlife parks and talk to your family and friends about why you oppose zoos.”

On its website, which specifical­ly references Auckland Zoo, the organisati­on says “zoos, especially, argue that they take part in important conservati­on work, educate the public, and provide animals with enriched habitats. In reality, the business model of zoos involves many things that have nothing to do with conservati­on or education and are more about keeping animals as living museum exhibits”.

REMEMBER THE first time you went to Auckland Zoo?

Buley has walked Canvas all the way to the back of the 96-year-old, 17ha Western Springs complex. Past the African savannah where “a sitting giraffe means it’s happy”, past the pink flamingos, blinking meerkats and newly acquired ostriches, which have surprised everyone with their penchant for pond-swimming. “Look at them,” says Buley appreciati­vely. “If you took all their feathers off, they would be dinosaurs.”

Last year, Auckland Zoo bred 1635 wetapunga and 58 threatened New Zealand birds for release back into the wild. It holds the only captive population of the world’s most critically endangered amphibian, Archey’s frog. Te Wao Nui opened in 2012, hosting 75 native animals (and 100 plant species). But what Buley wants to show us is the old elephant house. It has been converted into a cafe, but some features have been retained — including the huge, heavy, metal spiked doors.

“The original doors,” says Buley. “In our lifetime.”

He remembers his first visit to a zoo, back in the UK. “The most abiding emotion ... was one

The work you do in a zoo, the research and the science and the finding stuff out, has a direct impact on conservati­on. That’s why I cared.

Kevin Buley

of sympathy, rather than awe.”

But, says the 47-year-old father of three, even a negative zoo experience can have a positive effect.

“All the good zoos in the world are not going to save the planet on their own. The people who visit zoos will save the planet. We are a conservati­on organisati­on, but the most important thing we do is develop connection­s with people. People who connect to animals are nicer people.”

Can he prove that?

“Well, Hannibal Lecter didn’t like ... ” but he stops short.

“In terms of social science, if you create connection­s and empathy in kids, then they are nicer kids and they turn into nicer adults. Increasing­ly, we have a problem — not just in Aotearoa, but globally — where people are becoming disconnect­ed with nature.”

AUCKLAND ZOO contains 135 species and more than 1400 animals. Right now, one-fifth of it is under constructi­on — a $50m Southeast Asian precinct that will include a climate-controlled dome replicatin­g conditions in an Indonesian swamp forest is on track to open next year.

Buley reckons “95 per cent” of the world’s zoos should be shut down. “Developing country zoos will make you cry. You are talking about lions and tigers in cages not much bigger than themselves with concrete floors and baths. It’s incredibly uncomforta­ble to see.

“There is a lack of understand­ing of what a good zoo is. There’s a lack of empathy with animals ... there’s a lot of that ‘we bought a zoo’.”

He rolls his eyes. “Good zoos are undermined by the lowest common denominato­r.”

Last year, 698,045 people visited the zoo. According to Auckland Regional Facilities, 81 per cent of Aucklander­s say the zoo “enhances

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 ??  ?? Auckland Zoo director Kevin Buley with some of his stripey charges.
Auckland Zoo director Kevin Buley with some of his stripey charges.

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