NATURE ON DISPLAY IN AMERICAN ZOOS

 

IELTS Trainer

TEST 5 (FIVE)

ACADEMIC READING PASSAGE 1 (ONE)

1 FALSE
2 TRUE
3 NOT GIVEN
4 TRUE
5 NOT GIVEN
6 TRUE
7 FALSE
8 reptiles
9 monkeys
10 habitat(s)
11 behavior
12 vets
13 conservation

 

ACADEMIC READING PASSAGE 2 (TWO)

14 E
15 B
16 E
17 F
18 A
19 birch trees
20 (Russian)
21 pumps
22 cables
23 volcanic explosions
24 C
25 D
26 A

 

ACADEMIC READING PASSAGE 3 (THREE)

27 B
28 A
29 D
30 NO
31 YES
32 NOT GIVEN
33 NO
34 YES
35 NOT GIVEN
36 NO
37 C
38 E
39 A
40 B

 

The first zoo in the United States opened in Philadelphia in 1874, followed by the Cincinnati Zoo the next year. By 1940 there were zoos in more than one hundred American cities. The Philadelphia Zoo was more thoroughly planned and better financed than most of the hundreds of zoos that would open later. But in its landscape and its mission to both educate and entertain, it embodied ideas about how to build a zoo that stayed consistent for decades. The zoos came into existence in the late nineteenth century during the transition of the United States from a rural and agricultural nation to an industrial one. 

 

The population more than doubled between 1860 and 1990. As more middle-class people lived in cities, they began seeking new relationships with the natural world as a place for recreation, self-improvement, and Spiritual renewal. Cities established systems of public parks, and nature tourism, already popular, became even more fashionable with the establishment of national parks. Nature was thought to be good for people of all ages and classes. Nature study was incorporated into the school curriculum, and natural history collecting became an increasingly popular pastime.

 

 At the same time, the fields of study which were previously thought of as „natural history‟ grew into separate areas such as taxonomy, experimental embryology, and genetics, each with its own experts and structures. As laboratory research gained prestige in the zoology departments of American universities, the gap between professional and amateur scientific activities widened. Previously, natural history had been open to amateurs and was easily popularized, but research required access to microscopes and other equipment in laboratories, as well as advanced education. 

 

The new zoos set themselves apart from traveling animal shows by stating their mission as the education and the advancement of science, in addition to recreation. Zoos presented zoology for the non-specialist, at a time when the intellectual distance between amateur naturalists and laboratory-oriented zoologists was increasing. They attracted wide audiences and quickly became a feature of every growing and forward-thinking city. They were emblems of civic pride on a level of importance with art museums, natural history museums, and botanical gardens. 

 

Most American zoos were founded and operated as part of the public parks administration. They were dependent on municipal funds, and they charged no admission fee. They tended to assemble as many different mammal and bird species as possible, along with a few reptiles, exhibiting one or two specimens of each, and they competed with each other to become the first to display a rarity, like a rhinoceros. In the constant effort to attract the public to make return visits, certain types of display came in and out of fashion; for example, dozens of zoos built special Islands for their large populations of monkeys. In the 1930s, the Works Progress Administration funded millions of dollars of construction at dozens of zoos, for the most part, the collections of animals were organized by species in a combination of enclosures according to a fairly loose classification scheme. 

 

Although many histories of individual zoos describe the 1940s through the 1960s as a period of stagnation, and in some cases there was neglect, new zoos continued to be set up all over the country. In the 1940s and 1950s, the first zoos designed specifically for children were built, some with the appeal of farm animals. An increasing number of zoos tried new ways of organizing their displays. In addition to the traditional approach of exhibiting like kinds together, zoo planners had a new approach of putting animals in groups according to their continent of origin and designing exhibits showing animals of particular habitats, for example, polar, desert, or forest. During the 1960s, a few zoos arranged some displays according to animal behavior; the Bronx Zoo. for instance, opened its World of Darkness exhibit of nocturnal animals. Paradoxically, at the same time as zoo displays began incorporating ideas about the ecological relationships between animals, big cats and primates continued to be displayed in bathrooms like cages lined with tiles. 

 

By the 1970s, a new wave of reform was stirring. Popular movements for environmentalism and animal welfare called attention to endangered species and to zoos that did not provide adequate care for their animals. More projects were undertaken by research scientists and zoos began hiring full-time vets as they stepped up captive breeding programs. Many zoos that had been supported entirely by municipal budgets began recruiting private financial support and charging admission fees. In the prosperous 1980s and 1990s zoos built realistic „landscape immersion‟ exhibits, many of them around the theme of the tropical rainforest, and increasingly, conservation moved to the forefront of zoo agendas. 

 

Although zoos were popular and proliferating institutions in the United States at the turn of the twentieth century, historians have paid little attention to them. Perhaps zoos have been ignored because they were, and remain still multi-purpose institutions, and as such, they fall between the categories of analysis that historians often use. In addition, their stated goals of recreation, education, the advancement of science, and the protection of endangered species have often conflicted. Zoos occupy a difficult middle ground between science and showmanship, high culture and low, remote forests and the cement cityscape, and wild animals and urban people.

 

Section 2

Solution and Explanation

Questions 1-7: Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?
First, you have to Read the IELTS reading sample – Nature on display in American zoos. Then you have to read the question and answer accordingly.
For questions numbering from 1-7, You have to write:

 

TRUE                      If you find the statement agreeing with the information

 

FALSE                    If you find the statement contradicting the information

 

NOT GIVEN          If you don’t find any relevant information.

 

 

Questions:

  1. The concepts on which the Philadelphia zoo was based soon became unfashionable.
  1. The opening of zoos coincided with a trend for people to live in urban areas.
  2. During the period when many zoos were opened, the study of natural history became more popular in universities than in other scientific subjects.
  3. Cities recognized that the new zoos were as significant an amenity as museums.
  4. Between 1940 and 1960 some older zoos had to move to new sites to expand.
  5. In the 1970s, new ways of funding zoos were developed.
  6. There has been serious disagreement amongst historians about the role of the first zoos.

questions number 8 – 13

Upto 1940 More mammals and birds exhibited than 8 ………. 9. ………. were very popular animals in many zoos at one time
The 1940s and the 1950s Zoos started exhibiting animals according to their 10 ………. and where they came from.
In the 1960s Some zoos categorized animals by 11 behavior
In the 1970s 12. ………. were employed following protests about animal care.
From 1980s onwards The importance of 13 ………. became greater.

 

THANKS FOR READING: nature on display in American zoos

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