I am just curious as to what the Bronx president is going to do. (If he will go with the decision of the last president to phase out the elephants, I mean) And if he does go with the previous decision, what will be placed there...
I think it would be great if the Bronx zoo made a huge improvement and added a whole section of their zoo just for elephants, like how at san diego zoo they have a whole section for their elephants, EO. But I don't mean that they should follow the same theme of education.
I don't like it when zoos hide away their elephants, or when they don't make a big deal about them. The bronx zoo is a good example of this.
So is Roger Williams Park Zoo in rhode island. RWPZ doesn't really ever talk about how lucky they are to be a small zoo and still have elephants there, and they are lucky to have them. They do however sometimes talk about how they will soon be the only zoo in new england to have them, or in the general vicinity of new england since buttonwood park zoo (bad elephant program) and bronx zoo's program are supposed to close. RWPZ only has one yard, but it's pretty enriching. The elephants never sway when they are outside, only when they are in the barn.
I am also very disappointed, especially because they are untapped genes. It would also have been fantastic for Alice, since she doesn't really get along too well with the other elephants and is always on the other side of the yard (they aren't as bad relationships as happy is at the bronx zoo, so they can be at the same yard at the same time, but she is just always by herself at a different area of it)
I am very curious what the Buffalo Zoo will decide in almost a year's time. They have two females who are mostly not exhibited together because they don't get along. It will be a shame that during their next inspection they will pass for polar bears, but will probably be noted or fail for the elephant exhibit.
Well, most sources like news articles say that the Bronx zoo will phase out their elephants.
I would suggest being cautiously optimistic about whether Bronx will keep the elephants or not.
If they did get rid of elephants, maybe they could move the GOH rhinos into that exhibit, and put something else in the current GOH rhino exhibit.
I think it would be great if the Bronx zoo made a huge improvement and added a whole section of their zoo just for elephants, like how at san diego zoo they have a whole section for their elephants, EO. But I don't mean that they should follow the same theme of education.
I don't like it when zoos hide away their elephants, or when they don't make a big deal about them. The bronx zoo is a good example of this.
So is Roger Williams Park Zoo in rhode island. RWPZ doesn't really ever talk about how lucky they are to be a small zoo and still have elephants there, and they are lucky to have them. They do however sometimes talk about how they will soon be the only zoo in new england to have them, or in the general vicinity of new england since buttonwood park zoo (bad elephant program) and bronx zoo's program are supposed to close. RWPZ only has one yard, but it's pretty enriching. The elephants never sway when they are outside, only when they are in the barn.
The Portland Zoo was reported to be searching for a site for a "Remote Elephant Center," essentially a huge, off-campus breeding center for elephants. The National Zoo had an on-campus conservation site in Front Royal VA called the Smithsonian Conservation and Biology Institute since 1975, and I wish they would consider using some of their 3000 acres for breeding Asian elephants.
That and the excellent science practiced by parent conservancy makes it an absolute crime that this facility isn't using its space to help conserve a species that many zoos simply can't house.
Off-zoo breeding centers are bad solution, because elephants are needed on show to bring visitors and help education and conservation. If a center actually breeds their elephants, than a social group would need to be broken to bring them back on exhibit. May be logical for a circus company, where the aim is to separate young elephants once they can be performing.
For the same reason I don't like so-called 'sanctuaries' or animal shelters under cryptic name. Elephants there don't fill their most important reason why they are in captivity - don't spread the conservation message and help others of their species.
Portland's off-site elephant center is a work in progress. Smithsonian has been considering the presence of elephants at Front Royal for at least 15 years. But it doesn't make sense to build either of them at the moment until elephants become available.
I never heard SCBI was considering elephants! How did you discover this? I have this simple little idea to get important elephants from Asia. Four of NZP's current herd started out in 1975 at Sri Lanka's Pennawala Elephant Orphanage, a situation I jokingly call "the alumni council." But it made me think. CITES bans importation of endangered animals from the wild, but perhaps getting a couple of the orphanage's 70 charges would be more possible. Getting animals from a not-for-profit organization instead of the wild should make some considerable difference in compliance with international trade regulations. And surely, there must be some in the orphanage that have leg injuries that would prevent their return to the wild. The only Asian elephant I know to have entered the country from the wild is Portland's Bornean elephant, Chendra; she was injured and in desperate need of medical help. You're so right in saying that we currently don't have the elephants to use large sanctuary facilities. We need the Asian equivalent of SDSP's Swaziland culling group.