PRESS ROOM

Archive: Illegal Snare Traps Turned into Animal Sculptures on Display at Detroit Zoo

Exhibition highlights unique conservation initiative working to eliminate poaching

May 2, 2019

ROYAL OAK, Mich., 

One-of-a-kind sculptures made from illegal snare traps that threaten wildlife in East Africa will be on display in the Detroit Zoo’s Wildlife Interpretive Gallery beginning May 8. This special exhibition, called Snares to Wares: Capacity for Change, is comprised of works of art created by artisans in Uganda who live near a national park at which wildlife poaching is a serious problem.

The Snares to Wares Initiative was created by students and conservationists at Michigan State University to provide alternative sources of income for local residents in northern Uganda who may otherwise turn to poaching wildlife to provide for their families. In poverty-stricken towns with scarce resources, steel wires found in discarded vehicle tires are often used to create illegal traps to capture wildlife – many of which are endangered – as a food source.

Through the Initiative, these illegal and inhumane snare traps are removed from national parks to keep wildlife from being poached. The wire from these traps is used to create sculptures of the animals typically caught in snares, including lions, giraffes and elephants. The works of art are then sold, providing much-needed income for the artists. The sculptures are for sale at Zoofari Market at the Detroit Zoo for the benefit of the Snares to Wares Initiative.

“Snares to Wares exemplifies what can happen when people have a way to provide for themselves that is good for their families and good for wildlife,” said Scott Carter, Detroit Zoological Society (DZS) chief life sciences officer. “The initiative has created an alternative to poaching as a source of income that is helping wildlife and people in Uganda, and is a model for communities around the world.”

Snares to Wares: Capacity for Change will be on display through March 2020 and includes a life-size lion sculpture commissioned by the DZS.

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