By opening up veterinarian procedures to public view, Turtle Back Zoo is turning animal care into must-see education—shifting perceptions, fueling conservation, and igniting new curiosity about the realities of wildlife health and science.
For decades, most trips to the zoo have followed the same pattern: families stroll past exhibits, marveling at the visible wonders—giraffes striding across paddocks, gibbons swinging through trees, leopards napping in afternoon shade. But hidden away from public view, crucial medical work was happening that most visitors never considered. That is, until now.
Turtle Back Zoo in West Orange, New Jersey, is making animal health central to the visitor experience by putting real veterinary care on display. It’s more than a new exhibit—it’s a movement towards radical transparency in zoo medicine, and it’s quickly redefining what it means to connect with wildlife in a modern, science-led institution.
How Public Vet Care Became an Attraction
On a recent morning, a group of curious onlookers gathered at the zoo—not for a glimpse of a rare animal, but to watch a small, light-brown sulcata tortoise undergo its wellness check. Through a plate-glass window into a brand-new treatment room, visitors watched as the tortoise was measured, X-rayed, microchipped, examined, and coaxed through a series of tests and diagnostics.
Dr. Kailey Anderson led the examination, methodically explaining her steps and showcasing just how much patience, technique, and science goes into even the most routine animal care. For visitors, it offered a rare, close-up look at procedures usually conducted far from public scrutiny.
This direct view is a new phenomenon in American zoos. While Animal Kingdom at Disney has been a pioneer since 1998, only about a dozen of the approximately 250 AZA-accredited U.S. zoos have sustained, routine public-facing veterinary suites. Turtle Back Zoo is now part of this small, influential group, putting medical science on center stage.
Transparency, Trust, and Changing Attitudes
The move to center veterinary care in the guest experience isn’t accidental. In recent years, social media campaigns and legal actions have fueled questions about animal welfare and ethical standards in zoos. Put simply: when animal care is hidden, speculation takes over. By opening doors—literally and figuratively—zoos like Turtle Back are rewriting that narrative, turning transparency into assurance.
As Dr. Scott Terrell, an industry expert, emphasizes, public viewing “is a very easy way for the public to really understand and appreciate the care that these animals get.” The strategy aims to build public trust, foster empathy, and remind visitors that world-class medical science underpins every healthy animal encounter they enjoy.
- Interactive education: Live sessions create opportunities for staff to narrate animal stories and teach about medicine, biology, and conservation—not just entertainment.
- Transparency as advocacy: Open vet care challenges outdated perceptions, answering critics by directly demonstrating the science and ethics underlying modern zoo operations.
- Community engagement: These sessions, especially for young visitors, offer unforgettable, hands-on exposure to science careers and inspire future veterinarians and conservationists.
Inside Turtle Back Zoo’s Turnaround—and Its State-of-the-Art Animal Hospital
The Turtle Back Zoo story is remarkable even before this latest innovation. From near-closure in the 1990s to welcoming nearly a million visitors a year, the zoo has been transformed by targeted renovations, ambitious species conservation efforts, and dynamic leadership from county executives and directors.
Today it houses about 150 species and is recognized for major contributions to sea turtle rehabilitation and clouded leopard conservation.
Its new $17 million veterinary hospital, completed in April, is the direct result of growing staff and animal diversity. With funding from state, federal, and county sources, the hospital is designed to balance animal safety, cutting-edge care, and public learning. Glass viewing walls give families an up-close look at procedures like exams and dental work (with sensitive surgeries kept private for safety and privacy).
Conservation, Education, and a New Kind of Wild
Raising awareness is central to Turtle Back Zoo’s long-term vision. As Essex County Executive Joseph DiVincenzo Jr. notes, the goal is not just to show off animals but to “let kids learn what’s going on.” Zoo director Jilian Fazio sees transparent vet care as a way to foster a direct, meaningful connection between visitors and the creatures in their care, creating advocates for conservation beyond the zoo gates.
- Notable animal stories include a social-media-famous cheetah-Labrador friendship and ongoing work rescuing and rehabilitating stray or injured wildlife, like the tortoise featured in the live exam.
- All new arrivals, including rescues, undergo quarantine and thorough vet screening—now with visitors sometimes watching the process.
- Transparency makes it easier to showcase successes, document care, and build credibility with the public and regulators alike.
What This Means for Zoos and the Future of Animal Care
Other leading zoos are pursuing similar strategies, with some building broadcast studios, observation decks, and live feeds to widen the reach of public vet medicine. The Oklahoma City Zoo, for instance, has let visitors observe everything from routine exams to complex surgeries. Visitor reactions range from deep engagement to occasional queasiness, showing just how powerful these real-life experiences can be for public learning.
For zoo leaders and advocates, transparent veterinary spaces are more than a trend: they are an essential trust-building tool and a model for future-forward, science-based engagement. By breaking down barriers, these programs inspire empathy, curiosity, and understanding—laying the groundwork for a more informed, compassionate, and conservation-minded public.
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