Should Johannesburg Zoo's last elephant stay or go?

Should Johannesburg Zoo's last elephant stay or go?
In this Tuesday, June 19, 2018, file photo Lammie, an elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo, kicks around a ball made of plastic hose piping. When the last African elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo lost her male companion to illness in September, some people said 39-year-old Lammie should be sent to a bigger sanctuary so she wouldn't spend her final years alone. The zoo now says Lammie is staying, and that a search for a new mate is underway. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell, File)

When the last African elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo lost her male companion to illness in September, some people said 39-year-old Lammie should be sent to a bigger sanctuary so she wouldn't spend her final years alone.

The debate is particularly sensitive because the world's biggest land mammal is known for intelligence, strong social bonds and even the ability to grieve. The zoo now says Lammie is staying, and that a search for a new mate is underway.

The case of Lammie, born in the zoo, echoes that of Happy, an Asian elephant that has lived at the Bronx Zoo in New York since 1977, including over a decade without another elephant in the same enclosure. Some activists say Happy should go to a sanctuary with other , but the zoo said in 2016 that she is "healthy and comfortable," has bonded with the people who care for her and has "tactile and auditory contact" with the zoo's other two elephants.

In Johannesburg, Lammie had lived for 17 years with Kinkel, a 35-year-old male elephant who was rescued in the wild after his trunk was caught in a snare in 2000. Since he died on Sept. 4, Lammie has been on her own and some conservation groups say it's time to move out.

"Now that Lammie has lost her companion, she is in desperate need of a happier existence and the chance to live out her years with other elephants," Audrey Delsink, wildlife director of Humane Society International/Africa, said in a statement. She said many zoos around the world have recognized the "welfare challenges" of confining such a complex animal and that a sanctuary similar to the wild is ready to take Lammie if the Johannesburg Zoo agrees to let her go.

Should Johannesburg Zoo's last elephant stay or go?
In this Tuesday, June 19, 2018, photo Lammie, in her enclosure at the Johannesburg Zoo. When the last African elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo lost her male companion to illness in September, some people said 39-year-old Lammie should be sent to a bigger sanctuary so she wouldn't spend her final years alone. The zoo now says Lammie is staying, and that a search for a new mate is underway. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)

South Africa's NSPCA, an animal welfare group, appealed for an end to "the endless and redundant cycle of continuously condemning elephants to captivity for many years to come."

The Johannesburg Zoo says it serves an educational role and hosts visitors from low-income communities who don't have the means to visit wildlife parks. But Michele Pickover, director of the EMS Foundation, which lobbies on African wildlife topics, said "nobody learns anything" by seeing a "tormented elephant" in an enclosure and that watching a documentary film about elephants would be more educational.

Elephants in the wild, meanwhile, are threatened by poachers who have killed large numbers every year to supply ivory to consumers, particularly in parts of Asia.

The Johannesburg Zoo is hoping to find another elephant to join Lammie in line with regulations set out by the World Association of Zoos and Aquariums, spokeswoman Jenny Moodley said. She said experts are intensively monitoring Lammie and that the elephant might not necessarily adapt well if placed in a new environment.

Should Johannesburg Zoo's last elephant stay or go?
In this photo dated Tuesday, June 19, 2018, Lammie, an elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo, looks through the gate of her enclosure. When the last African elephant at the Johannesburg Zoo lost her male companion to illness in September, some people said 39-year-old Lammie should be sent to a bigger sanctuary so she wouldn't spend her final years alone. The zoo now says Lammie is staying, and that a search for a new mate is underway. (AP Photo/Denis Farrell)

"She is coping incredibly well, considering that she has lost her partner," Moodley said.

Lammie refused to eat around the time of her partner's death, according to the zoo. The day before Kinkel died, she was seen trying to help him get up.

© 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Citation: Should Johannesburg Zoo's last elephant stay or go? (2018, December 11) retrieved 21 June 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-12-johannesburg-zoo-elephant.html
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