Arts & Entertainment
National Visit The Zoo Day: See What’s Happening In Dallas
National Visit the Zoo Day on Thursday, Dec. 27, is a perfect time to visit the Dallas Zoo.

DALLAS, TX — If you’re looking for something to do while the kids are out of school, a visit to the Dallas Zoo might be just the ticket. Thursday, Dec. 27, is National Visit the Zoo Day.
List any special activities your zoo may have; if none, just a general description of some of the zoo highlights will work.
Zoo exhibits have changed significantly over the years. Before the 20th century, animals were often kept in cages with bars that left them very little room to move around, let alone explore their surroundings. In today’s zoos, enrichment activities — things the animals enjoy doing and that demonstrate their species-specific behavior — are viewed as essential to animals’ welfare as proper nutrition and veterinary care.
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Tell Us: What’s your favorite exhibit at Dallas Zoo and why? Tell us what you think in the comments.
Zoo animals’ habitats have expanded, too. The movement to house animals in a more “natural” space began in the early 1900s when Carl Hagenbeck, whose family was involved in the wild animal trade, created “Tierpark” in Stellingen, Germany.
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Gone were the bars and cages and in their place were moats to separate some of the animal groups, according to Smithsonian Library blog written by Polly Lasker. Hagenbeck encouraged trainers to treat the animals kindly and use gentle coaxing rather than some of the harsher methods that were typical at the time.
“What is now taken for granted by almost every visitor to a zoo — moated exhibits in a landscape simulating nature; gregarious animals of mixed species kept in herds in large enclosures; and animal performances based on conditioning and sensitivity, not on brute force and intimidation — all started at Hagenbeck’s Tierpark,”Herman Reichenbach wrote in “New worlds, new animals: from menagerie to zoological park in the nineteenth century.”
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