Imagine, a baby primate that comes out of hibernation for food with his mother, he goes out to get bananas to eat with his mother. It's the first time he went outside and bonded with her. Then he heard this blast of sound which reaches 140 decibels. Gunshots, his mother suddenly goes down and he, the primate who was only in this world, hoping for achievements and life, however it's immediately crushed. He had a burst of tears from all of the pressure that emits from the men. She got kicked down the mountain, his mother. And the men who started shooting approached to you, they grab him and grab his neck violently and put him in a bag. Hours later he ended up in this cage, he felt so much anxiety and sadness all the time from how he just saw his mother died so violently and fast. He can't adjust to this location and don't seem to fit in. People who say Captivity is fine and it's all dandy, are wrong. There are different types of captivity which save the animals life, though that is very minuscule. Though there are two situations of this predicament, go and be isolated in this horrific cage by these people who are so unknown to you, or live a happy life with your family and end up having your own. …show more content…
Well, the problem is to your argument is the majority of the zoo breeding programs is once they save the animals they still keep them in captivity that's the big problem. Most zoos actually don't even release the animal, they just keep them and sell them to people. When zoos claim that they send them to the wild, it's because that they want that animal to be endangered again so they can still own them. Most animals are endangered for manmade, but some are from predators and animals who were designed to eat for eg, small fish and other avians and species. The cycle for that and to save them is impossible, they know that so they take advantage of