Terry Lee Maple[1] (September 10, 1946 – December 3, 2023) was an American ethologist, wildlife conservationist, professor emeritus of the Georgia Institute of Technology, and zoo director emeritus.

Terry Maple
Born
Terry Lee Maple

(1946-09-10)September 10, 1946
DiedDecember 3, 2023(2023-12-03) (aged 77)
Occupation(s)Ethologist, conservationist, professor, zoo director

Maple authored many publications on animal welfare. He was best known for his 18-year tenure as director, and later President and CEO, of Zoo Atlanta. He was credited with transforming the troubled zoo into a model institution and fiscally sound cultural attraction.[2]

Career

edit

Zoo Atlanta

edit

In 1984, Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young appointed Maple, then a 38-year-old animal behaviourist, to serve as interim director of the Atlanta Zoo. An investigation revealed the facility was in disrepair and plagued with problems from political infighting to scandal. In addition, the zoo's membership was revoked by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the national zoo association and regulatory body. Maple was appointed interim director and ultimately director.[citation needed]

That same year, the zoo was listed in Parade magazine as one of the ten worst zoos in the United States. The negative publicity prompted a strong public outcry from the community, and increased a growing public sentiment that the facility should be closed down.[3][4]

In 1985, the management of zoo operations was put in the hands of a new private non-profit organization, the Atlanta-Fulton County Zoo, Inc, with Maple responsible for overseeing all departments from animal care and veterinary services to fundraising. In addition to privatization, the zoo was rebranded Zoo Atlanta.[5]

Under Maple's leadership, the reputation of Atlanta's metropolitan zoo was restored and the zoo became a popular cultural attraction and pioneering zoological facility in terms of the management and study of endangered species. Zoo Atlanta also extended its contributions to the local community beyond the perimeter of the zoo campus. In partnership with Atlanta's WSB-television, the zoological organization won six Emmy Awards for local educational programming.[citation needed]

Maple retired from Zoo Atlanta in 2003 as the founding President and CEO and assumed the title of Zoo Director Emeritus.[citation needed]

Animal welfare science in zoos

edit

Maple developed an organizational culture and instituted practices at Zoo Atlanta whereby evidence-based methods were starting to be employed. Other institutions have benefitted from research published by staff at Zoo Atlanta, while some zoos have begun to adopt their own model of using animal welfare research to improve animal care at their respective facilities.[citation needed]

In many ways Zoo Atlanta has emulated modern-day natural history museums, which have traditionally been considered more scholarly and scientific than zoos. Most museums employ curatorial staff with courtesy research and teaching appointments at universities. Zoo Atlanta is one of the few zoos in the industry to have followed this approach in an effort to foster research activities and cultivate practices based on science. A few institutions have research departments and university partnerships, but through Maple's dual appointment he was able to establish a unique relationship between zoos and local universities.[6][7][8]

Association of Zoos and Aquariums

edit

As President of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) from 1998 to 1999, Maple established the association's first diversity initiative and widened the membership's scientific network and reputation within the academic research community. He also worked to differentiate AZA accredited zoos and aquariums from roadside attractions and other menageries.[citation needed]

Zoo Biology

edit

Maple was the founding editor of the scientific journal Zoo Biology, which was originally published by John Wiley/Blackwell in association with the AZA.[9] When Maple retired from editorial roles with Zoo Biology, he was bestowed the title of Editor Emeritus of the Journal, along with Donald Lindburg of the Zoological Society of San Diego and Dan Wharton, formerly of the Chicago Zoological Society.[10]

Research

edit

Great ape research

edit

As an internationally recognized expert on the behavior, welfare, and conservation of great apes, Maple was poised to develop ethological programming for Zoo Atlanta's innovative lowland gorilla exhibit. He designed an exhibit which offered opportunities for rigorous study of primate behavior in a conventional primate laboratory, while providing a visitor experience that was immersive, engaging and educational to patrons. Today, Zoo Atlanta's gorilla exhibit is acknowledged as one of the most important gorilla facilities in the world.[citation needed]

Over a span of more than 15 years, the partnership between Georgia Tech and Zoo Atlanta permitted Maple and his staff to successfully advance lowland gorilla conservation, exhibition, husbandry, propagation and research, for which the Zoo won the AZA's prestigious Edward H. Bean Award. The Zoo's success with great apes was made possible by a partnership with Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory University which loaned the gorillas and orangutans to the Zoo. The Zoo's gorilla exhibit is sponsored by Ford Motor Company and branded as the Ford African Rain Forest. It is the first exhibit designed for a population of gorillas distributed in four contiguous groups.[11][12]

Later career

edit

San Francisco Zoo

edit

Maple served from 2011 to 2014 as the San Francisco Zoo’s first "Professor-in- Residence" and the architect of their unique "Stanton Family Wellness Initiative" including applications to exhibit and facility design.[12][13][14]

Jacksonville Zoo

edit

In his engagement as Professor-in-Residence, Maple was a mentor to keepers, curators, and veterinarians at the Jacksonville Zoo and Gardens. As a Scholar-in-Residence, he also taught and mentored graduate students in two departments at the University of North Florida.[15]

Palm Beach Zoo

edit

In 2005, Maple was granted a formal leave of absence from Georgia Tech to become the President/CEO of the Palm Beach Zoo. On Earth Day 2009, the Palm Beach Zoo opened the innovative Melvin J. and Claire Levine Animal Care Complex, including a state-of- the-art animal hospital and the innovative Center for Conservation Medicine. Equipped with solar power provided by a grant from the Florida Power & Light Foundation, the U.S. Green Building Council certified the building LEED Gold, the first LEED-certified zoo veterinary hospital in the nation.[citation needed]

The Community Foundation of Palm Beach and Martin County honored the Palm Beach Zoo as its "Sustainability Leader" among 59 competing non-profits in the region, confirming the zoo's growing leadership role in sustainability. Maple retired as CEO of the Palm Beach Zoo in 2011. He resumed his affiliation with Florida Atlantic University and finished his thirteenth book, Zoo Animal Welfare (co-authored with Bonnie Perdue) published by Springer-Verlag in 2013.[16][17][18]

Death

edit

Maple died on December 3, 2023, at the age of 77, after complications from an infection;[19] he was living in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.[1]

Selected publications

edit
  • Zoo Animal Welfare (2013)
  • Beyond Animal Welfare: The Art and Science of Wellness (2019)

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Terry Maple Obituary (2023) - Mount Pleasant, SC". Charleston Post & Courier. Retrieved 2024-01-16 – via Legacy.com.
  2. ^ "From Worst to World Class". Zoo Atlanta.
  3. ^ "Turning it around". The Prescott Courier. March 26, 1989.
  4. ^ "Atlanta Zoo Starts To Clean Up Its Act -- And Its Cages". orlandosentinel.com. 4 August 1985.
  5. ^ "History of Zoo Atlanta: If I told you that Zoo..." Atlanta History Center.
  6. ^ Chaker, Anne Marie (9 July 2014). "High Design at the Zoo". Wall Street Journal.
  7. ^ "Inside the Minds of Zoo Animals". Science Friday.
  8. ^ Wilcox, Lauren (25 July 2012). "Modern zoos could be creating a new kind of animal: wild by nature, shaped by captivity" – via washingtonpost.com.
  9. ^ "Zoo Biology". Wiley Online Library. John Wiley & Sons. doi:10.1002/(ISSN)1098-2361. Retrieved 2022-06-08.
  10. ^ "Dr. Terry L. Maple". World Safaris.
  11. ^ "Harambe's Behavior May Have Been Normal Gorilla Play". nationalgeographic.com. 31 May 2016. Archived from the original on June 1, 2016.
  12. ^ a b "S.F. Zoo turns to consultant for habitat vision". sfgate.com. 2 July 2012.
  13. ^ http://www.sfzoo.org/pdf/press/2012/09012012_pressrelease.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  14. ^ Schreiber, Dan (September 13, 2012). "San Francisco Zoo retains psychologist to improve animal wellness". The San Francisco Examiner.
  15. ^ "Safari Park kicks off $18 million capital campaign". www.morgancountycitizen.com.
  16. ^ Goldman, Jason G. "A Psychologist Goes To The Zoo: An Interview with Terry L. Maple". scientificamerican.com.
  17. ^ "Zoo president teams with key conservative for book". orlandosentinel.com. 22 November 2007.
  18. ^ Maple, Terry L. (28 March 2012). "A Zoo Where the Animals Come First". Aps Observer. 25. Association for Psychological Science.
  19. ^ Kelley, Colin (13 December 2023). "Former Zoo Atlanta director Terry Maple dead at 77". Rough Draft Atlanta.
  NODES
Association 8
COMMUNITY 4
INTERN 1
Note 1