They “can” and have been historically more common place than you will find today.I was wondering if a few African elephants could live with a few Asian elephants? All would be females. Thanks
They wouldn’t be breeding just living together.They “can” and have been historically more common place than you will find today.
Even producing short lived offspring (Chester)
Whether they “should” be is another matter entirely. Someone more informed will be along to list all the pitfalls but off the top of my head;
Prevalence of illness specifically herpes virus
Geographic theming
Hybrid breeding etc
Miami (and perhaps others) exhibit both species but in separate exhibits as a happy compromise.
I referenced that anecdotally as I thought may be of interest.They wouldn’t be breeding just living together.
So it is possible? Sorry my English isn’t good.I referenced that anecdotally as I thought may be of interest.
Unless the all female group you propose has a miraculous conception I think that is a fairly safe bet.
It is “possible”, whether it is best practice etc is debatable.So it is possible? Sorry my English isn’t good.
I was wondering if a few African elephants could live with a few Asian elephants? All would be females. Thanks
I recall I often wondered why little news was heard about African elephant calves dying from EEHV...In the 2000s it was discovered that elephant pox virus (EEHV) which is deadly for Asian elephants, mostly calves, is spread by African elephants. since then zoos stopped mixing the species. A few very old, not breeding elephants remain in mixed groups.

In the past, when zoos kept just 1-2 elephants for display, they were often kept together and got along well.
In the 2000s it was discovered that elephant pox virus (EEHV) which is deadly for Asian elephants, mostly calves, is spread by African elephants. since then zoos stopped mixing the species. A few very old, not breeding elephants remain in mixed groups.
In the past, when zoos kept just 1-2 elephants for display, they were often kept together and got along well.
In the 2000s it was discovered that elephant pox virus (EEHV) which is deadly for Asian elephants, mostly calves, is spread by African elephants. since then zoos stopped mixing the species. A few very old, not breeding elephants remain in mixed groups.
I recall I often wondered why little news was heard about African elephant calves dying from EEHV...
That explains it !
The "EEHV was spread to Asian Elephants from African Elephants in zoos" wasn't "discovered" - it was a hypothesis, and proved not to be true with later research. There are multiple species and strains of EEHV, of which a number (including the EEHV1 which kills Asian Elephant calves in zoos) are found naturally in wild Asian Elephants.Do you have any sort of link to this?
Not anymore. The last Asian elephant passed away a few months back and it's highly unlikely the zoo will be receiving new individuals.The San Diego zoo houses them together.
The "EEHV was spread to Asian Elephants from African Elephants in zoos" wasn't "discovered" - it was a hypothesis, and proved not to be true with later research. There are multiple species and strains of EEHV, of which a number (including the EEHV1 which kills Asian Elephant calves in zoos) are found naturally in wild Asian Elephants.
This is a paper from 2014 but shows that the idea had been discarded a decade ago:
Elephant Endotheliotropic Herpesviruses EEHV1A, EEHV1B, and EEHV2 from Cases of Hemorrhagic Disease Are Highly Diverged from Other Mammalian Herpesviruses and May Form a New Subfamily | Journal of Virology
To explain the unexpected severity of acute EEHV hemorrhagic disease, we originally suggested that the juvenile Asian elephants under human care in zoos may have contracted primary infections with EEHV1 viruses that are native to African elephants, either by direct contact with African elephants or from Asian elephant carriers who had themselves acquired the virus asymptomatically. However, the recent discovery and genetic analysis of similar cases of lethal disease in wild calves in Asian range countries showing the presence of multiple strains and subtypes of EEHV1 casts considerable doubt on that assumption.