Small Concrete Boxes: Inside China\’s Zoos

by M. Scott Brauer

The animals are in cages that are too small. Weather conditions are inhospitable to many of the tropical animals on display. And the food supply is generally inadequate; visitors often throw junkfood into the trash-strewn pens. While all is not lost--in Hefei, a large city in Anhui Province, for instance, the tigers have been moved to a large, open-air habitat. Many other animals in Hefei and elsewhere throughout China, from Sanya in the far south to Beijing in the north, remain locked in their small concrete boxes.There are signs of hope. A number of well-run tiger and panda preserves have sprung up throughout the country as a means of educating the public about China's wildlife and as a way to foster the continuation of these species. These facilities are deserving of the international praise they've received. The panda centers in Sichuan have done remarkable work in preserving the species and the animals' habitat. But the international media has done little to report on the condition of far greater numbers of animals wasting away in the country's urban zoos. Rumors abound that the animals in some of these facilities become fodder for Chinese medicine and rare products such as tiger corpse wine. Visitors hound the animals, tossing plastic bottles or hot dogs into the cages, rapping on the windows. The cages are small, dirty, and otherwise poorly maintained. Many of the animals are overcrowded, injured, or unhealthy.Few foreigners see these zoos; they're rarely marked on English-language maps and they're usually located far from the well-beaten tourist path. And yet, the zoos remain enormously popular among the Chinese public. Most of the zoos are cheap (US$1-5 per ticket) in comparison to other weekend activities and the zoos offer a chance to see many animals that have been wiped out of their natural habitats by the tremendous force of Chinese development. Though conditions seem to be improving in the country's urban zoos, the progress is slow. The small concrete boxes filled with sickly animals will remain a fixture in China's cities for a long time to come.

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9 Responses to “Small Concrete Boxes: Inside China\’s Zoos”

 

  1. karla mrstik says:

    This is a sad story the lion looks very sickly and sorrowful as well. The thought of Chinese making tiger corpse wine gives me shivers.

  2. Emma says:

    feel like holding her hands to show friendness, but fear she might harm somebody, so ,to keep a distance?

  3. Mieke says:

    careless empty souls - CHINAAA

  4. [...] story, “Small Concrete Boxes: Inside China’s Zoos,” has made it through the intial screening for the Viewbook Photo Story competition. The [...]

  5. Great documentary! I really love the last picture!

  6. Ann says:

    Some corners of Chinese zoos do indeed look a bit creepy. Animals in zoos are more considered as attractions rather than beings who also deserve respect. Still some education to do…

  7. l warburton says:

    Your photos truly show the cold soulless treatment of animals in human care sometimes. I reviewed many many of the other submissions and this viewbook of such horrific treatment just kept haunting me.
    Well done on hitting the emotional mark in this work.

  8. [...] M. Scott Brauer http://www.viewbookphotostory.com/2010/10/small-concrete-boxes-inside-chinas-zoos/ SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “Good Photojournalism”, url: [...]

  9. Coco Rococo says:

    Hello, I adore your work. It very touching. I featured you on my blog http://cocoshoots.blogspot.com I hope you dont mind.
    Tereza aka Coco Rococo



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