2018
DOI: 10.1002/zoo.21427
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Phylogenetic comparative methods: Harnessing the power of species diversity to investigate welfare issues in captive wild animals

Abstract: This paper reviews a way of investigating health and welfare problems in captive wild animals (e.g., those in zoos, aviaries, aquaria, or aquaculture systems) that has great potential, but to date has been little used: systematically comparing species with few or no health and welfare issues to those more prone to problems. Doing so empirically pinpoints species-typical welfare risk and protective factors (such as aspects of their natural behavioral biology): information which can then be used to help prevent … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Consequently, equally important research candidates remain understudied due to this lack of baseline information. Use of ecological information on species' habitat choices can be used to inform housing (Mason, 2015, Kroshko et al, 2016, Mellor et al, 2018 and suitability of husbandry can be evaluated via individual preference testing (Mehrkam and Dorey, 2015, Troxell-Smith et al, 2017a, Troxell-Smith et al, 2017b. Therefore, constructing "in-zoo" questions based on manipulations that can yield species-specific information means that these poorly understood species can be researched and improvements to their husbandry be made on an evidence-based approach.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consequently, equally important research candidates remain understudied due to this lack of baseline information. Use of ecological information on species' habitat choices can be used to inform housing (Mason, 2015, Kroshko et al, 2016, Mellor et al, 2018 and suitability of husbandry can be evaluated via individual preference testing (Mehrkam and Dorey, 2015, Troxell-Smith et al, 2017a, Troxell-Smith et al, 2017b. Therefore, constructing "in-zoo" questions based on manipulations that can yield species-specific information means that these poorly understood species can be researched and improvements to their husbandry be made on an evidence-based approach.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Environment and living conditions also contribute to weight gain [13] and, should these covary with our wild ecology predictors, could be confounds [63]. Therefore, using the information on living conditions we collected in our survey, we calculated six husbandry variables (see Table 1) believed a priori to likely influence body weight so we could later statistically control for their effects if necessary.…”
Section: Definitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our sampling method of captive animals is non-random, as we recruited Species360 member zoos. Using survey responses from different people likely introduced noise into our data (see [63]). Being observational rather experimental also means there may be other unmeasured variables not considered here, e.g., calorie intake (sensu [13]), which could affect our outcome and/or be confounded with our predictors.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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