Yazziel
Well-Known Member
1. TES also has the space to keep Nicole apart from the others is she wants to, without compromising the welfare of one of the elephants involved. Old females that are not integrated into a multigenerational familys are notoriously difficult to entertain as they are not very playful and often not interested in socialising with (unrelated) females, and without natural vegetation to feed on these females usually spend their days rocking and bored. Lets be honest, we have all seen it. It s much easier to keep a bachelor group with young bulls or a family group with calves busy in a zoo environment; they do not depend as much on natural vegetation as these socially difficult older females. Sadly the zoos interested in taking old females are usually those with the worst facilities, because they do not have enough space for a breeding group and not the safety facilities for a bachelor group. Like San Antonio zoo when they got Nicole…
3. Nicole herself has been exposed to TB since she was a longtime member of the Ringling Blue Unit. Ringling had many many TB infected elephants again and again and never imposed strong quarantine for those infected, and therefore it was an ongoing problem. TB can lay dormant for many years before getting active, and bringing Nicole into a heathly zoo herd would be a risk for the other elephants there. At TES she will be with other elephants who have been exposed to TB (sadly all Asian elephants at TES are, and that is not the fault of the sanctuary).
I do agree TES is in a much better situation now as for as management goes. But Nicole wont have the abundance of friends to choose from as many people believe. Since she is not positive with TB she will go to the Asian Habitat that currently holds Sissy and Nosey (the African elephant who has a history of being exposed to TB). If she doesn’t get along with Sissy she will be on her own and Nosey doesn’t share the same space as her asian neighbors. The other 4 Billie, Ronnie, Debbie and Minnie are all TB positive and are separated in the Quarantine Habitats.
TB is treatable in elephants why TES has not dealt with this remains unknown (maybe not enough money). It’s been along time when most AZA zoos treat a positive case and the elephant is free of TB within a year.