Taronga Park Zoos own words

07-03-2006
I have again challenged Taronga Park about the decision to house a group of breeding elephants in their relatively small enclosure , when WPZ would be a more logical choice ?
I have copied their response ; see below . I do not neccessarily agree with what they said , but its words from the horses mouth .
I have asked Auckland Zoo what their latest thoughts are of breeding the elephants , and where will the semen come from if they still hope to achieve breeding by AI .
Zooboy and/or Patrick ; You have both seen the Taronga Park Elephant complex ;
Do you think it is really big enough for the elephants that Taronga Park have got ?
Do elephants really need flattish land ? According to Wellington Zoo , one of the reasons that they didnt replace the elephant/s there was because of the steep terrain that covers alot of the zoo . OK , Wellington zoo is very steep ,( probably second only to San Diego Zoo ) but Taronga Park is not exactly flat , or even rolling land .
Hi Nigel....thanks for your email of 3 March. I
had previously responded to
the majority of your queries in Dec last year -
copy attached again for your
records.
Yes, we do have additional land earmarked for
elephant exhibit expansion if
required at both Taronga and Western Plains Zoos.
The new Asian Elephant
exhibit at WPZ is 12,574sqm.
As part of the Cooperative Conservation Plan for
Asian Elephants in
Australasia, the herd will be managed as an
cooperative group between ARAZPA
Zoos. That means, in order to maintain a viable
herd, offspring may be sent
to other ARAZPA Zoos in the program. This will
be done fully cognisant of
family bonds, especially the recognition of
mother/daughter relationships.
In the majority of cases, they will not be
separated (only under very
specific circumstances).
I am not quite sure what you mean by 'too steep
for elephants' in relation
to topography. The elephant's habitat/environment
in Thailand can be a great
deal steeper! I am again not quire sure what you
mean about the relationship
between steep slopes and breeding?
Sydney-siders were very attached to 'Burma' and
'Heman', Taronga's resident
Asian Elephants, and needed a very good reason
for moving them to Western
Plains Zoo. Call it a marketing tool, but we used
the words 'retiring to
WPZ' to communicate to the community. They are
also very elderly for
elephants and 'retirement' was a nice word to
use.
Taronga Zoo attracts more than 1.2 million
visitors, whereas Wester Plains
attracts somewhere in the vicinity 200k. Our
conservation education and
in-situ fundraising opportunities are far greater
at Taronga.
I could probably count on one hand the number of
people who have asked for
additional information than that provided on our
website. We are more than
happy to answer specific questions such as yours
on a case-by-case basis.
You can appreciate that the majority of the
community can become overwhelmed
by too much information and end up tuning out
rather than absorbing it.
We have proven on numerous fronts (including via
the legal system) that we
have only the best interest of the individual
animals, as well as the entire
endangered species, at heart. The community for
the most part recognises the
role Zoos play in conservation. We use the
terminology in-situ conservation
for ex-situ effort. Environmental and
conservation education, research (both
laboratory and in-situ), captive insurance
populations and community
enlightenment are all part of the process. The
Zoological Parks Board of NSW
has made a deliberate decision to fight the
demise of the Asian Elephant -
believe me, it's costing us a great deal more
than we expect to get back via
any increased admissions we may receive. On a
purely commercial basis, this
is not a viable investment, but one the ZPB has
decided we must take up. We
are a not-for-profit organisation and all
proceeds are ploughed back into
conservation and environmental education. I find
it quite amusing that
groups would think this was a commercial
endeavour.
I can hear you saying 'but what about investing
in Thailand?' - well there
just isn't the land/habitat available (only 15%
of Thailand's rainforest
remains), most of the displaced elephants are
domestic and privately owned
(2,500 domestic as opposed to approx 2,000 wild)
and furthermore, Taronga
and Western Plains Zoos are operated by the NSW
Govt and thus the NSW tax
payer, who do not think to kindly to their tax
dollars being spent in
another country. We have a formal partnership
with the Thai Govt to provide
funding for in-situ programs (such as funding to
CITES MIKE for ranger
training and wild elephant tracking, as well as
funding for fencing pockets
of natural habitat), provision of husbandry
expertise and keeper exchange
programs.
Can I please reiterate that the elephants coming
to Australia are domestic
bred - NOT wild. They have spent a great deal of
their lives tethered in
tourist camps. Some of them were even walked into
Bangkok to perform for
tourists.
Hope that covers all your queries.
Kind regards
Hayley Holloway
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