Joburg zoo elephants

Lammie’s 40th birthday celebrations and World Elephant Day at Joburg Zoo on Monday were marred by scenes of highly stressed elephants.

 

Johannesburg, South Africa – In a viral video shared online, Lammie is seen running out of her dark quarters, clearly confused and traumatised. The two other elephants behind bars also react in alarm, much to the misguided delight of the screaming onlookers.

The Zoo’s two new elephants, a 22-year-old male, named Ramadiba and a 19-year-old female named Mopani are still kept separate from Lammie.

MUST-READ: THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM… DEBUNKING THE MANY MYTHS OF ELEPHANT INTERACTIONS! 

Zoo spokesperson Jenny Moodley confirmed to Beeld that Lammie has been kept separate from the newcomers and only been allowed to interact with them through fences for small periods at a time.

On World Elephant Day, Mopani was made to do tricks to entertain the crowds of visitors bussed in for the occasion. Photos show her having to lie down, then roll over in front of the media. She was also made to stand on her knees several times. The two newcomers were initially caught in the wild by EFAF as calves and trained to perform stunts for the elephant tourism industry.

Brett Mitchell, an elephant behavioural expert and chairperson of the Elephant Reintegration Trust (ERT), says the Zoo’s cruel experiment is typical of a facility that’s only keeping elephants for the sake of entertainment and economic gain.

“The elephants’ behaviour indicates they were under immense stress.” Heavy temporal streaming, running with head and tail up and foot-swinging are typical signs of distress and separation anxiety in elephants. “Lammie is seen spinning, dribbling urine and kicking the ground as soon as she is released back into the enclosure on her own. From the other two elephants, there is loud bellowing while they buckle their hind legs – a typical sign of stress,” Mitchell says.

“If the Zoo had any respect for elephants, especially on World Elephant Day, they would not have created an entertainment program for people which negatively affects the very animals they claim to look after,” Mitchell says. “The Zoo once again shows their complete lack of morality and has no concern for their elephants’ welfare.”

Furthermore, he says, the children visiting the zoo “did not learn anything besides that it’s okay to lock up elephants, stress them out and provoke them for the sake of human entertainment”.

DA Shadow Minister of the Environment, Forestry and Fisheries (DEFF) spokesperson James Lorimer says its “extremely distasteful and wrong.

“How do you get to a situation where you have zoo animals doing tricks, and for whom? Zoos are supposed to be about education and teaching people about the importance of wildlife, and this does not aid that understanding,” he says.

According to Zoo spokesperson Jenny Moodley, the elephants enjoyed the interaction. “The two new elephants that came from a sanctuary were trained to respond to groups of people at the sanctuary that they were based at,” she says. “Yesterday was no different with Mopani showing off her training.”

The two new elephants were held in a small fenced enclosure throughout the day where the circus tricks were performed.

Audrey Delsink, Humane Society International (HSI) Africa Wildlife Director and elephant biologist says the Zoo’s actions are “shocking, but not surprising. Once again, this shows that entertainment trumps while the elephants’ welfare is pushed aside.

“The increased noise and disturbance as well as the children’s misplaced shouts of delight clearly exacerbated the situation and elevated the elephant’s stress,” Delsink says. “We are extremely concerned about the elephants’ safety and well-being.”

This latest incident follows a public outcry against the keeping Lammie in the Zoo and the introduction of two new elephants.


Sources: Conservation Action Trust 
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