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comment by user-inactivated
user-inactivated  ·  2762 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Love wildlife photos? There’s a good chance they weren’t shot in the wild

I thought things like staged photos and events were pretty common knowledge. I mean, James Audubon hired hunters to collect specimens for him so he could make all of those beautiful bird paintings and Disney running lemmings off the cliff seems to be the event everyone always brings up. It can often be hard to get good shots (if sometimes impossible), even with lenses that can focus farther, higher definition cameras, better imaging technology, motion activated cameras, those fancy little snake cameras, etc. Documentaries often use a lot of really cool tricks, such as filming insect activities in studios with special artificial nests or taking two or three different reels of completely different animals of the same species hunting and splicing them together. The way I see it is nature is a fickle thing and even when you're in the thick of it, it's easy to miss what's going on. The filmmakers are doing their best to tell fact based stories and if that involves using a little trickery, I'm okay with that. I think the only issue I have is when wildlife photographers use bait to lure animals into a shot. I'm very anti-feeding wildlife (I'm even morally against birdfeeders and bird baths, believe it or not) and I don't think that's okay in the slightest.





kleinbl00  ·  2762 days ago  ·  link  ·  

My viewpoint is that if someone wants to pay money to take pictures of critters whose upkeep is paid for by people who pay to take pictures of them, then so long as the critter is okay with it who are we to judge? And sure - captivity vs. roaming free and Sea World is turribl and all the rest but it's not like there aren't wild animals in captivity all over the world.

    I'm very anti-feeding wildlife (I'm even morally against birdfeeders and bird baths, believe it or not) and I don't think that's okay in the slightest.

This is an interesting viewpoint. Can you elaborate?

user-inactivated  ·  2762 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I agree with you. To expand a little, it's really important to keep the animal's welfare in mind. There are a lot of private zoos and shelters out there with a wide range of quality in animal care and I'm sure many of them are run by people who mean well, but who might not understand the biological needs of the animals they're taking care of and as a result, are unable to give them the best care possible. I'm sure there are many hoops to become an accredited member of the AZA for example, but organizations like this exist for a reason and from what I understand, they have stricter standards than the USDA (which I'm pretty certain is the governmental organization that oversees private animal collections).

    This is an interesting viewpoint. Can you elaborate?

Sure. There are a ton of reasons why people shouldn't feed wildlife. The food that we give them might not be appropriate for their diet, it can make them grow accustomed to and possibly even dependent on humans for food, it can encourage abnormal animal congregation that can lead to aggressive behavior (towards people, pets, or each other) and the spreading of diseases, it can disrupt their eating, sleeping, and migration patterns, on and on. Feeding wildlife can easily become a real problem.

With bird feeders and bird baths in particular, I'll just link to the Wikipedia Article on bird feeders and suggest you check out the "Negative Impacts" section. They summarize the point much better than I can and a lot of those same points, especially the hygiene issue, carry over to bird baths as well.