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Robots In Zoos Soon, Experts Predict

Zoo Robots

First Posted: 02/17/2012 9:29 am Updated: 02/17/2012 9:48 am

By: InnovationNewsDaily Staff
Published: 02/16/2012 11:38 PM EST on InnovationNewsDaily

It's 2060, and you're planning to visit your grandkids in California. You know they love animals, so you're thinking of taking them to a zoo. Let's see what your search results pull up: 

Welcome to the San Francisco All-Robotic Zoo!
The most advanced robotic animals in the world, straight from Silicon Valley | New tiger model just in | Totally humane--no real animals in cages

Dodo Chick Exhibit Now Open at the San Diego Zoo
Come visit our brand-new dodo chicks! Touch here to enter the naming contest.

SeaWorld: Go Head-to-Head with Dolphins
"Talk" to Slick and Kiki with our exclusive brainwave interface. Now taking reservations for February.

A group of 21 zoo professionals and researchers came up with these future zoo possibilities and more at a conference held at Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y., on Feb. 10-11.

They saw that robotics is infiltrating every other aspect of life, from automatic vacuum cleaners to intelligent operating systems, said Michael Noonan, a biologist at Canisius College who studies how people and animals interact. "So the implication is that they are clearly coming in the zoo world," he said. The group had mixed responses to whether a robotic zoo would work, however. Some thought they would be exciting; others felt that no matter how realistic the models were, people wouldn't be interested. "That one was left sort of unresolved," Noonan said.

With improving brain science, future zoos might even let people get a glimpse into animals' thoughts with brainwave-reading devices, according to one attendee's presentation, Noonan told InnovationNewsDaily. "It would allow us to connect better to the wolf or dolphin."

The group said cloning technology would eventually come to a point where it would be possible to re-create extinct animals. "No, not dinosaurs," Noonan said, "but things that are feasible and appropriate." Animals that went extinct more recently might be considered appropriate, for example, because they might still have existing habitats and ecological niches on Earth. Animals that were clearly driven to extinction by humans are also candidates. In those cases, some argued that people have an ethical obligation to try to bring back the species they killed off, such as dodo birds. "It's like a human mistake that could be fixed," Noonan said. 

Researchers have tissue samples from dodo birds, passenger pigeons, mastodons, a relative of the zebra called the quagga, and a marsupial carnivore called a thylacine or "Tasmanian wolf," which died out in the 1930s, Noonan said. All of those animals, Noonan added, could be brought back to life in the future.

The most likely first candidate for resurrection, however, died off 4,000 years ago, probably due to a combination of climate change and prehistoric human hunting. Woolly mammoths are likely to get cloned because scientists have excellent samples of their DNA preserved in permafrost, said Jeffrey Yule, a biologist at Louisiana Tech University and a conference attendee. Even the more recently extinct dodo can't compare, as preservation methods used by museums can wreck havoc on DNA.  

While reliable cloning technology is far in the future, it's important to talk about the issue now, Yule said. "We should think about it now before the technology is perfected because if we think ahead about how we might use the technology, it might head us off from making mistakes," he said. 

Just because people may be able to bring back extinct animals doesn't mean they should, Noonan and Yule agreed. For example, the conference attendees thought that if an animal's habitat no longer existed on Earth, they should not be revived only to have nowhere for them to live happily. Animals should not be brought back just as curiosities, Noonan said.

The conference attendees also spent time thinking about nearer-term changes to zoos in the future. Zoos are moving toward keeping animals that better fit their climate and size, Noonan said. That means no polar bears in Florida zoos and more space for elephants and giraffes. 

They also talked about the increasing number of animals in the world, especially in Europe, that have become "semi-wild" because they live in small patches between human-inhabited areas. Noonan called Yellowstone Park bison semi-wild because they are accustomed to tourist cars. 

In an era of wildlife documentaries in HD, zoos may seem quaint. But zoo attendance is strong, Noonan said, and they may have an important place in the future as the planet loses its wild land. "Imagine a world where nearly everyone lives in a city and they hardly ever see a living animal unless they go to a zoo," he said.

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By: InnovationNewsDaily Staff Published: 02/16/2012 11:38 PM EST on InnovationNewsDaily It's 2060, and you're planning to visit your grandkids in California. You know they love animals, so you...
By: InnovationNewsDaily Staff Published: 02/16/2012 11:38 PM EST on InnovationNewsDaily It's 2060, and you're planning to visit your grandkids in California. You know they love animals, so you...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
10:38 AM on 02/19/2012
Rachael: Do you like our owl?
Deckard: It's artificial?
Rachael: Of course it is.
Deckard: Must be expensive.
Rachael: Very.
Rachael: I'm Rachael.
Deckard: Deckard.
Rachael: It seems you feel our work is not a benefit to the public.
Deckard: Replicants are like any other machine - they're either a benefit or a hazard. If they're a benefit, it's not my problem.
from Blade Runner
06:12 PM on 02/19/2012
So much atmosphere, replicants cyborgs, drones, a few other words all slipping away as we begin to use ''robot'' for all forms. ''Replicant'' was good. Cyborg has menace.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
08:54 AM on 02/19/2012
What we really need are large areas fenced off from human civilization were animals may live in peace. We would use powerful tiger robots prowling the fence to protect them from us.
06:14 PM on 02/19/2012
Maybe everyone could move to enlarged Dubais and leave the rest of the planet to be itself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
majorwiblit
Mr Natural says,,,"Don't mean Sheeet!"
06:28 PM on 02/18/2012
after will kill them all,,,which we are doing
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
08:57 AM on 02/19/2012
We should all go to the Moon, and leave the Earth to the animals who are better able to take care of it. Dodos would have wanted it that way!
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
11:50 AM on 02/18/2012
Just bore the existing animals a bit more, and you'll be there.
wilsoncombatgrl
Ignorance is curable, but stupidity is forever!
02:56 AM on 02/18/2012
If I want to see artificial animals moving I can play with my kids' Zhou Zhou pets for free.
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photo
07:40 PM on 02/17/2012
You get up...
you swat the flies off of you...
you have a drink...
you swat the flies off of you...
you look at the food they are feeding you...
you walk to the other side of the cage...
you swat the flies off of you..

Clones and "chatamals'
thats all the big money
is interested in.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:32 PM on 02/17/2012
No thanks.
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Artemesian
Spiritual Messenger of the Earth
02:32 PM on 02/17/2012
"Noonan said, and they [zoos] may have an important place in the future as the planet loses its wild land. "Imagine a world where nearly everyone lives in a city and they hardly ever see a living animal unless they go to a zoo," he said."

Hows about we just take steps to insure that the planets doesn't lose its wild land or wild animals? (a radical idea, I know.) This is the craziness of mankind - bringing back a wooly mammoth, who became extinct naturally, when there are animals living on the planet right now whose future is endangered and habitats are stressed. And creating zoos with more space for elephants and the larger animals has me wondering where on earth they will find all this extra space.

Keeping wild animals in captivity is simply wrong and inhumane. More effort should be spent restoring their natural habitats, not creating zoos to preserve wild animals. If people want to learn about animals, they should see them in their natural habitat or learn about them in other ways. If not, such is life. Nobody said we can have everything we want.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
06:40 PM on 02/17/2012
How about we only detain wild animals, rather than the life sentences they all get now?

I think there is great value in people seeing animals that there is no way they would otherwise see. Live animals up close that you can interact with.

Agreed it must be as humane and enjoyable as possible for the animals. The natural habitat reconstruction where the humans are in the cages is a good idea.

I remember hear this lonely big cat howling and pacing in his cage which was probably an a few acres and I just hated zoos for that. But year later they had brought in a harem and they all seemed very happy.

Some animals no longer have any safe habitats to return to, terrible, what a species we are.

The crowded, too small zoos upset me the most. I have seen 4 dolphins in a room sized tank in SF. That's just wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Godiva
GLBTQ - A
02:31 PM on 02/17/2012
I can in contact with one of the baby seals in our medical school. They're used for patients in different settings. Quite cute.
02:03 PM on 02/17/2012
so dumb...peak oil is going to make alot people look stupid when we realize all this technoptmism is unfounded
10:47 AM on 02/17/2012
When the robots take over, we will be the ones in the zoos.....:)