elephants in australian zoos

29-11-2004
a few years back 4 australasian zoos were faced with a decision to make. their elephants where living in substandard old fasioned concrete enclosures and needed to be moved. but if the zoos where to build a new exhibit for their elephants, it would cost millions of dollars and would only be worthwhile if the zoos became commited to displaying elephants in the long-term. this was to be a very big commitment for not only would it require finding the millions of dollars in funds needed to build a new world-class exhibit - it would require bringing into the country more elephants to innitiate breeding and keep these animals in a more natural and psychologically stimulating group setting. a co-operative agreement would have to be made with all the zoos comminting to similar procedures in husbandary and training tecniques and the zoos would need to become more actively involved with elephant conservation overseas.
so auckland, melbourne, taronga and perth zoos all decided to keep their elephants and upgrade their enclosures and melbourne, who had been fundraising for the best part of 10 years began construction of their new world-class "trail of the elephants".
but somewhere along the line the zoos got something terribly wrong.
for starters, they forgot the most important thing of all - elephants need space, and lots of it!
as beautiful as melbournes enclosure is for humans to look at, it really isn't much bigger than the old one. the really stupid thing is that melbourne, like taronga zoo, has a sister open range zoo, whos founding purpose was to display large, herd living megafauna in an open environment that better reflected a change in public opinion. strangely, the zoos felt the world largest megafauna species of all was exempt from qualifying for such a zoo.
instead a whole bunch of half truths where used to try and convince the nieve public of why the elephants should be kept in the city rather than moved to the country.
"asian elephants, unlike african elephants don't come from the savannah, they come from th rainforest and therefore are better staying in melbourne who can better re-create a rainforest environment"
- actually as someone who has viewed asian elephants in the wild on numerous occasions, believe me, they ofeten found in open grasslands.
or what about;
"it's not about how much space an animal has, its about how much how much behavioural enrichment it recieives"
right, but wouldn't both be even better still? is a prisoner in the excersise yard just as happy as a free person?
the truth is there is only one reason why the australasian statutory zoos chose to build their exhibits in the city - they needed a new drawcard to boost visitor numbers! its all about money and no doubt a few people who work at those city zoos who were attatched to their elephants and wanted to keep them there.
personally, i'm not against keeping elephants in captivity. i have been to numerous elephant sanctuaries and national parks in asia where elephants are sucessfully kept in a reproductive, physically and mentally enriched environment.
but there is not one single damned reason why melbournes elephants would are better off in a 10 million dollar exhibit in the city, rather than a 10 million dollar exhibit in the country. not one, and i welcome anyone to try to think of one and let me know.
the aweful truth is, elephants don't even breed very well in captivity and if the zoos really wanted to gather the publics trust and do whats best for their elephants they would have sent ALL their elephants to the same open range zoo 10 years ago.
this would have created a herd of 7 females (of which 4 are young enough to breed) and 3 males, of which at least 2 are still young and healthy enough to reproduce. once the animals began to breed, then the zoos could consider importing new stock. or even if the zoo herd required a bit of a lesson natural behaviour from some thai elephants, they could import a few more straight away, the public would understand because the zoos had already proved they where doing the right thing by their elephants, putting the animals they already had, first.
the zoos wouldn't have even needed to raise all the money themselves. they simply could have pooled a few million each (rather than raise 10 million themselves!) to this new elephant breeding facility.
but you can bet not one zoo wanted to give up their precious elephants. instead they all want to import more and make even more mistakes.
elephants belong only in open-range zoos!
send your local zoo an email asking them why, if they are so serious about elephant breeding they decided that the middle of a city was the best place to do it. ask them why they felt their elephants were better off in a cramped "enriched" exhibit in the city than an equally enriched one at any of the 3 perfecally good open-range public satutory zoo's in australia.
in fact, open-range zoos experience nothing like the visitor numbers that city zoos get and something like elephants is exactly what the need to make them a little more interesting!!!
|