Upon becoming director, Blair submitted to the executive committee a seven-point list of suggestions that embodied his vision for the zoo: • Enlargement of the collection of the wild cattle of the world; • Experimentation with the Hagenbeck idea of barless exhibits, using moats instead of fences or bars; • Creation of a special exhibit for anthropoid apes; • A facility to promote breeding of big cats, monkeys, and small mammals; • A separate building for the exhibit of the zoo's very large collection of parrots and other psittacine birds; • An auditorium for lectures and member meetings; • A cooperative research program with local universities. Although many of these goals were realized after Blair's departure, their origins can be traced to Blair. These include the 1941 opening of the African Plains exhibit—a multi-species "barless" exhibit relying on moats—and the 1950 opening of another "barless" exhibit, the Great Apes House, which was eventually replaced in 1999 by the opening of the Congo Gorilla Forest. Blair was an avid and active collector of new species for the zoo. He authorized and sometimes accompanied numerous collecting trips and brought back many unusual animals, several of which were first exhibited in captivity at the Bronx Zoo. Among these were the first
Bongo ("Doreen") and the first
Okapi to be seen in the US. He sent the first expedition to New Guinea, which vastly expanded the zoo's collection of birds, especially birds-of-paradise. Blair was determined to promote the idea that the purpose of a zoo was as an "educational rather than as a purely recreational undertaking." He did much to advance this belief, beginning with winning a 1927 Ohio lawsuit over a bequest to the New York Zoological Society as an educational institution. Shortly thereafter, he hired the
Bronx Zoo's first docent, Claude W. Leister, a biology instructor at
Cornell University, as assistant to the director and curator of educational activities. == Other activities and achievements ==