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Ringling Bros. Phasing out Elephants by 2018

Discussion in 'United States' started by uszoo, 5 Mar 2015.

  1. Yassa

    Yassa Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    @loxodontaafrica: Are Kelly Ann, Sara, Rudy and Mable no longer travelling? Those are all in breeding age. Juliette might be cycling if she didn`t have to travel.
    And then there are the females who, due to their "circus duties", never had a chance to breed and are now sadly post-reproductive: Tonka, Luna, Siam II and Nicole were all in prime breeding age when the CEC started, but they always had to travel.

    Gosh, I so hope this will really be over by 2018.
     
  2. azcheetah2

    azcheetah2 Well-Known Member

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    Seriously? In what world would that be a good idea? I'd certainly never allow my family to participate in something so barbaric.
     
  3. azcheetah2

    azcheetah2 Well-Known Member

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    Not completely irrelevant since that part of the conversation was related to surplus elephants being created by Ringling having a breeding center.

    Greeeeaaaaat. Just wonderful
     
  4. azcheetah2

    azcheetah2 Well-Known Member

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    I had no idea. Wow. How incredibly sad. Something really needs to change.

    While Reba and Indu have improved mentally since their arrival in Phoenix, they can still be observed standing in one spot as though they believe they're still chained and rocking back and forth. They weren't with the circus at the same time, but both are dominant females so they can't be in the yard at the same time for very long because they get aggressive with each other.
     
  5. wensleydale

    wensleydale Well-Known Member

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    I remember am article in one of my local newspapers about a Ringling visit that mentioned how old each of the elephants that toured with the company was and had some other info on them, I will dig it up if I can find the time while this thread is still active relevant.
     
  6. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    I believe the post was something known as a joke.... ;)
     
  7. wensleydale

    wensleydale Well-Known Member

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    Maybe one of these Elephants will end up in Buffalo, if I understand correctly they will need a new elephant in the very near future. Just a random thought. They need one and Ringling Brothers could be a source.
     
  8. loxodontaafrica

    loxodontaafrica Well-Known Member

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    The North American Asian elephant TAG is far from a surplus. They actually really need the implication of Ringling's stock for long term viability.
    We're currently standing at an average of two births each year, if that. With the annual death rate surpassing the rate of reproduction. The population really lacks females in the range of 10-15 for the most part.
    If you were to look at the age pyramid in the 2010 studbook, most animals are post-reproductive, and recently expanded exhibits still remain understocked (Audubon, OKC, Honolulu, and soon to be Portland)
     
  9. vogelcommando

    vogelcommando Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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  10. wensleydale

    wensleydale Well-Known Member

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    uszoo likes this.
  11. Morgan

    Morgan Well-Known Member

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    Well it depends, I know that one of the big cat acts is owend by its trainer Alexander Lacey so he and his cats will most likley return to Europe after show folds for the last time. As for the other cat act i thought that was leased, as fot the horses, ponys, camels and zebras i have no idea
     
    Last edited: 18 Jan 2017
  12. Zorro

    Zorro Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    I believe the elephants have all been sold!
     
  13. wensleydale

    wensleydale Well-Known Member

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    To whom have they been sold?
     
  14. Kifaru Bwana

    Kifaru Bwana Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Great! So, a (inter-)nationally CITES regulated animal species can be traded in the US for cash!
    What is the conservation (breeding) benefit or relevance of that deal / decision?

    Who(m) are the buyers?
     
  15. loxodonta

    loxodonta Well-Known Member

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    The facility they are going to are world renowned for breeding other species. Particularly rhino, cheetah and okapi
     
  16. Tim Brown

    Tim Brown Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Re Kifaru..there are quite a number of elephants in european zoos that have been bought.When an animal is worth £50k or more it is unrealistic to expect people to donate them gratis. Re. Loxodonta...we have to be talking northern Florida right? In which case-a good outcome i would say.
     
  17. Kifaru Bwana

    Kifaru Bwana Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Tim, the choices are not many. It is a give away ...
     
  18. Kifaru Bwana

    Kifaru Bwana Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    Further to my comments: I am well aware that money changes hands when elephants are transferred, be this for veterinary testing/paperwork and transport costs (.... I am no angel nor living in fairyland). That is all well and good.

    However, and this is my argument - just ethically if beyond these logistical financial issues the elephants have been literally sold ... it flies in the face of international (and national) legislation on wildlife trade - aside any discourse on whether that legislation is actually effective or legally enforced - and that a commercial deal involving endangered species or individuals thereof does contravene the very foundations of CITES legislation (I know it is far from ideal and really more an economic / legal framework and not one that actually reflects levels of trade and / or the category of threat for the individual species concerned and thus secures their long term conservation and / or ensures viable populations remain in the wild).

    Furthermore, it is a fact that the private international trade in wildlife and wildlife parts is actually very detrimental to any wildlife populations in situ, and particularly the rarer ones - as in trade more often than not the rarer the higher ye price. In that respect, the realm of private individuals acquiring, holding and breeding wild animals and dealing commercially in them does not always stand favorably to an objective review of theory and practice.
     
  19. Tim Brown

    Tim Brown Well-Known Member 15+ year member

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    No,not covering costs...bought elephants- as in ownership.I know the U.S. quite well(for instance) and there are many rare CITES 1 listed animals in private hands (at least one hundred Pygmy Hippos for one).No,it seems to me that we can either morally pretend these populations do not exist and have nothing to do with them at all,or we can take the pragmatic choice that they COULD be very valuable indeed...and if some philanthropist is willing to see that they cross over the "separation line" then I can accept the circumstance...its a situation far removed from an animal market situation in Java .By the way, it is not illegal to have commercial trade in various levels of CITES provided that the correct procedures are followed.FINALLY,and I'm not saying this to condone the trade in endangered species,but how do you think the zoo world would look if this kind of thing hadn't gone on in the past(dealers/buying)?...you could forget about gorillas in zoos for starters.Or do you think that would actually be desirable?
     
  20. Coelacanth18

    Coelacanth18 Well-Known Member Premium Member 5+ year member

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    A few points I would like to add:

    I don't know if this was specifically what Tim Brown was referring to, but there is a private facility called Rum Creek that has many pygmy hippos (and other species, I think) breeding naturally and freely in semi-free range conditions. The AZA has been (or was?) in talks with them about collaborating with them on breeding, which would more than double the pygmy hippo population in the SSP.

    For private facilities that buy and sell animals to be included in breeding programs is a common occurrence in the US. Additionally, zoos often sell animals to other zoos, although the amount is usually small and more of a formality than anything else. Sometimes animals are sold to private facilities not participating in the breeding program (this happens with caprids a lot). My point from all of this is that money often changes hands when animals move from one facility to another, but that doesn't mean that profits were the motive behind the sale.

    Finally, with regards to Tim's last point: just because something happened in the past doesn't necessarily justify doing it today. Yes, we must acknowledge that free international trade in animals gave us the zoo populations that we have today and perhaps that was a good outcome, but that doesn't necessarily excuse the practice in the past and certainly doesn't in the present where most people know better.