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  #61
Old 09-09-2008

Could it be possible that the herd is eventually split between Taronga and Western Plains? and from there both allowed to expand in size.
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  #62
Old 09-09-2008

I think this is the long term result once there has been a few births. But not until the african elephants are gone from western plains zoo.
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  #63
Old 09-09-2008

That's probably going to happen in the future,
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  #64
Old 09-09-2008

look all of what you have said about space and so on is completly true and emmen and cologne do have alot more space, but also remember they were able to find that space, find a space in taronga that can house an exhibit close to that size i'll give you a prize. The point about the tropical african savannah is true however going by current rates it won't even be started for a good few years yet. The old sun bear enclosure has been fully commited to the red pandas as the current red panda yards are needed to meet the commitment taronga made to tassie devils.
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  #65
Old 10-09-2008

@zooworker: My answer to your point is very simple, if a zoo can`t give a species the space they need, do not keep them! Animal welfare must come first, or zoos making their mission ridiculous AND giving anti zoo people all reason to attack (hich I would definately support when it comes to Taronga elephants).

Yep, more people will see them in Taronga compared to Dubbo (for example), but that does not help wild elephants to survive, and it is no reason to spend millions of dollars on an enclosure which is already outdated and too small at the time of construction.
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  #66
Old 10-09-2008

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Originally Posted by Yassa View Post
Yep, more people will see them in Taronga compared to Dubbo (for example), but that does not help wild elephants to survive, and it is no reason to spend millions of dollars on an enclosure which is already outdated and too small at the time of construction.
Hold on I'd just like to clear up one thing, so if elephants aren't going to be used in a breeding program then we shouldn't spend a large portion of money on their exhibit?
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  #67
Old 10-09-2008

ok heres the info ok. The exhibit is not outdated for keeping the family of elephants we are keeping, you may notice the number difference, cologne has at least 20, we have 5, and in a few months there will only be 4 in that exhibit, so the land difference is not relevant due to numbers, please tell me what will help the elephants in the wild other than showing people them. I've had this argument many many times with multiple people, the only way you can educate people and get people to care for an animal truely, you have to have the animal there in front of them. So having elephants at taronga is important for elephant conservation, i also wish to discuss this term out of date with you. Out of date would refere to an exhibit if we built an exhibit that was concrete floored, no enrichment, chains other such things. I think you'll find the exhibit is well an truly upto standards of modern zoo's. Space does not mean happy elephants, barren space means nothing. The simple way of putting this, if we want to educate we need elephants, its simply not practical at the moment to keep a herd of 20 elephants in the region at the moment, and if you look at zoo's around the world not many facilities maintain herds of that size. No matter what people say the elephants are there, no one would have approved of the exhibit if it wasn't going to be suitable.
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  #68
Old 10-09-2008

That's true, now matter what there are always going to be animal activists protesting the rights of elephants, and finding flaws, even if the exhibit was extremly large I guess they will always be on our, back, It is kind of like I guess having a small house with lots of toys and video games to play with, and correct me if I'm wrong but I believe there are 13 elephants in Colonge but in an exhibit built for 20, ?
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  #69
Old 10-09-2008

probably, i'm not exactly sure of numbers of elephants, i work marine mammals so elephants secondary knowledge, but still doesn't matter, as you said no matter what you do there will always be people fighting who a lot of the time have never worked with animals or haven't done any animal sciences so yes not really credible.
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  #70
Old 10-09-2008

Its a tough argument to convince people that unless we see a live animal. The desire and heart connection required to stimilate the emotion. To care and actively contribute to there survival. Just does not happen in my experiance.

I fell in love with Gorillas the first time when l saw Rigo at Melbourne zoo many years ago.I dont belive my life journey and finacial support of Gorilas in captivity would have happened without that first meeting.

So yes lets have Elephants at the zoo. With passionate keepers like zooworker in charge of there care and enrichment. I would think they are in good hands.

It's a shame we dont live in a perfect world.....
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  #71
Old 10-09-2008

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Originally Posted by zooman View Post
Its a tough argument to convince people that unless we see a live animal. The desire and heart connection required to stimilate the emotion. To care and actively contribute to there survival. Just does not happen in my experiance.

I fell in love with Gorillas the first time when l saw Rigo at Melbourne zoo many years ago.I dont belive my life journey and finacial support of Gorilas in captivity would have happened without that first meeting.

So yes lets have Elephants at the zoo. With passionate keepers like zooworker in charge of there care and enrichment. I would think they are in good hands.

It's a shame we dont live in a perfect world.....
I don't work with the elephants, but the keepers there i know would do anything for their animals. And what you say about a perfect world is completly true. I think you'll find that if you speak to any animal keeper they will share my opinion that animals would be better in the wild, however in a world where the wild really isn't there anymore, to keep the animals alive we need zoo's. Running the line, saying that animals in the wild are free from human contraints and influence also is not valid now, no animal anywhere on the planet is out of the reach of humans or controlled by humans in some way. It's sad that it has come to this but it's the only way.
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  #72
Old 11-09-2008

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Originally Posted by zooworker View Post
ok heres the info ok. The exhibit is not outdated for keeping the family of elephants we are keeping, you may notice the number difference, cologne has at least 20, we have 5, and in a few months there will only be 4 in that exhibit, so the land difference is not relevant due to numbers, please tell me what will help the elephants in the wild other than showing people them. I've had this argument many many times with multiple people, the only way you can educate people and get people to care for an animal truely, you have to have the animal there in front of them. So having elephants at taronga is important for elephant conservation, i also wish to discuss this term out of date with you. Out of date would refere to an exhibit if we built an exhibit that was concrete floored, no enrichment, chains other such things. I think you'll find the exhibit is well an truly upto standards of modern zoo's. Space does not mean happy elephants, barren space means nothing. The simple way of putting this, if we want to educate we need elephants, its simply not practical at the moment to keep a herd of 20 elephants in the region at the moment, and if you look at zoo's around the world not many facilities maintain herds of that size. No matter what people say the elephants are there, no one would have approved of the exhibit if it wasn't going to be suitable.
While I agree with your general arguments about the purpose of having elephants in captivity, I would also argue that if you are going to spend alot of money importing individuals into the country for a breeding program, then a zoo should have the foresight to see that the group will need extra space in the future. If Taronga did not have sufficient space initially to allow a new elephant group to expand, then responsibly they should have never taken them on. To say that few facilities in the world do not have the space to maintain a large herd, only points out the stark point that the majority of zoos in the world should not keep elephants.

I have not seen Taronga's new exhibit so I cannot comment on its suitability however I can imagine that it would easily meet a modern zoo's expectations. My point is though if space doesn't make a happy elephant, then surely a large herd would.
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  #73
Old 11-09-2008

The exhibit itself according to standards was built to house the family we currently have and offspring. So thats actually not an issue. We are not trying to breed a group of 20 elephants, it's 4 females we are talking about, two of which are pregnant at the moment, however elephant pregnancies are still new to australia and so i don't think there will be a sudden increase in population by huge numbers. The exhibit itself has the elephants happy and healthy, which was proven by the first pregnancy being a natural one. There are zoo's that at the moment can't fully care for their animals, however i feel that limiting this to elephants is a bad mistake because there are many other large animals that zoo's around the world keep in limited conditions. The facilities that are successful with breeding and so on don't have to have large herds, i show you the herd at smithsonian national zoo, large herds aren't the be all and end all, it would be wonderful if all zoo's could but it's simply not viable. The same with Hippos, most zoo's keep 2-3 animals. Chimp's, most zoo's keep 5-10, should be in groups of 20-30 at least, gorillas at least 10 in the wild. White rhino, 2-3 animals on average, large herds in the wild. The problem with elephants as well is that in the past most zoo's have kept 2-3 female elephants and breeding in zoo's in general has been very unsuccessful, so we are sitting at the tail end of a time of bad elephant management and so it won't just fix itself, the issue's of group sizes, space, other such things are zoo wide issues.
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  #74
Old 11-09-2008

Taronga I guess is one of those tight knit groups instead of some much a large family herds, But when I went to sydney in 2006 the elephants looked very happy and I think the exhibit, though not large is very beautiful and unique,
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  #75
Old 11-09-2008

I dont buy the theory that zoo elephants need lots of space. Obviously, they need some space but space alone is not the only thing that defines an exhibit's success in my mind. If it was, then safari parks and open-range zoos would have been breeding elephants successfully now for decades, whereas in actual fact the jumbo baby boom across Western zoos is an ashamedly recent phenomena and in most cases isnt the result so much of bigger, better exhibits (many enclosures are better but not neccesarily bigger) but an increased emphasis on establishing proper herd dynamics (as well as other things). In fact some births in European zoos have occured in enclosures which arent at all nice, but they are kept together in stable herds.
I dont think you could call Taronga's exhibit outdated. In ten years time maybe, if they do nothing about expanding it or relocating surplus animals but the 5 animals at Taronga are part of the regional ASMP so as the program gets up and running theyll either be shuffled around or the enclosure may, hopefully, be modified as Ive suggested.
I think Taronga's enclosure is wonderful...from the interp and in-situ conservation links to the way it places the elephants in their proper ecological and cultural context. Since their arrival nearly two years ago I have spent so much time watching these eles and they dont stay still for a minute; they always have something to do. Its also worth remembering that here in Sydney, due to our relatively warm climate the animals dont need as much space as those in Northern Hemisphere zoos because they are free to roam indoors and out, 24/7.
so to call Sydneys exhibit outdated because its not huge is, I think, over-simplifying the very complex needs set of a magnificent animal which space alone cannot meet. any animal species, in any zoo, faces less variables than its wild counterpart in its day to day life, and therefore less stimulation. enclosures like Taronga's highly enriched one (both in an enviromental sense and social setting), backed by a skilled and resourced team of keepers, insert variety back into the lives of these intelligent animals. so its of very little suprise to me that, though the exhibit may no longer look like a Thai resort, that these animals are not stereotyping, not acting aggressively to keepers or acting morose, and are, in fact, breeding.
btw, the zoos 12 month report on its elephant care program makes very good reading.

Last edited by glyn; 11-09-2008 at 09:58 PM.
 


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