The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)

Thesis completed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Alfred University Honors Program. Stereotypies are repetitive behavioral patterns that serve no apparent purpose often performed by captive animals in response to poor welfare conditions. In carnivores, the most common stereotypy is...

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Main Author: MacDonald, Melissa
Other Authors: DeLorenzo, Heather, Emmons, Cherlyd, Beaudry, Frederic
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10829/7244
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spelling ftalfreduniv:oai:aura.alfred.edu:10829/7244 2023-08-20T04:05:46+02:00 The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi) MacDonald, Melissa DeLorenzo, Heather Emmons, Cherlyd Beaudry, Frederic 2016-04-18 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10829/7244 en_US eng Herrick Library http://hdl.handle.net/10829/7244 https://libraries.alfred.edu/AURA/termsofuse Honors thesis Zoo keepers Crowd size Mexican Gray wolves Thesis 2016 ftalfreduniv 2023-07-30T16:18:46Z Thesis completed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Alfred University Honors Program. Stereotypies are repetitive behavioral patterns that serve no apparent purpose often performed by captive animals in response to poor welfare conditions. In carnivores, the most common stereotypy is pacing. In this study, three Mexican gray wolves (Canis lupus baileyi) were observed at the Seneca Park Zoo (Rochester, NY) to evaluate frequencies of pacing by individuals as well as investigate if the crowd size in front of their exhibit or keeper presence had any effect of the frequency of pacing. It was found that two individuals had significantly different rates of pacing/day (H = 34.56, df=2, P < 0.005), over 10% of their total activity budget (Z = 7.38, P < 0.005). The presence of any amount of people in front of the exhibit significantly increased pacing for all three wolves (χ2= 48.608, df = 8, P < 0.005), but no difference was found between non-zero crowd levels. Keepers were not found to have a significant effect on pacing, and in fact significantly more pacing occurred while keepers were not present. Some suggestions for reducing pacing would be to educate the public on the sensitivity of the wolves to large crowds and large noises, move the wolves to a quieter, less travel area of the zoo, or place them in a private facility designed to house wolves in larger, naturalistic habitats. Thesis Canis lupus Alfred University Research and Archive (AURA)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred University Research and Archive (AURA)
op_collection_id ftalfreduniv
language English
topic Honors thesis
Zoo keepers
Crowd size
Mexican Gray wolves
spellingShingle Honors thesis
Zoo keepers
Crowd size
Mexican Gray wolves
MacDonald, Melissa
The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
topic_facet Honors thesis
Zoo keepers
Crowd size
Mexican Gray wolves
description Thesis completed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Alfred University Honors Program. Stereotypies are repetitive behavioral patterns that serve no apparent purpose often performed by captive animals in response to poor welfare conditions. In carnivores, the most common stereotypy is pacing. In this study, three Mexican gray wolves (Canis lupus baileyi) were observed at the Seneca Park Zoo (Rochester, NY) to evaluate frequencies of pacing by individuals as well as investigate if the crowd size in front of their exhibit or keeper presence had any effect of the frequency of pacing. It was found that two individuals had significantly different rates of pacing/day (H = 34.56, df=2, P < 0.005), over 10% of their total activity budget (Z = 7.38, P < 0.005). The presence of any amount of people in front of the exhibit significantly increased pacing for all three wolves (χ2= 48.608, df = 8, P < 0.005), but no difference was found between non-zero crowd levels. Keepers were not found to have a significant effect on pacing, and in fact significantly more pacing occurred while keepers were not present. Some suggestions for reducing pacing would be to educate the public on the sensitivity of the wolves to large crowds and large noises, move the wolves to a quieter, less travel area of the zoo, or place them in a private facility designed to house wolves in larger, naturalistic habitats.
author2 DeLorenzo, Heather
Emmons, Cherlyd
Beaudry, Frederic
format Thesis
author MacDonald, Melissa
author_facet MacDonald, Melissa
author_sort MacDonald, Melissa
title The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
title_short The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
title_full The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
title_fullStr The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Crowd Size and Keeper Presence on the Stereotypic Pacing of Mexican Gray Wolves (Canis lupus baileyi)
title_sort effects of crowd size and keeper presence on the stereotypic pacing of mexican gray wolves (canis lupus baileyi)
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10829/7244
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation Herrick Library
http://hdl.handle.net/10829/7244
op_rights https://libraries.alfred.edu/AURA/termsofuse
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