In the German Zoo Wuppertal the 4th elephant calf in the last 2,5 years was born on 13.01.2008. It is a bull-calf, named “Tamoâ€Â.
The young herd arrived in 1995 at Wuppertal Zoo and is meanwhile one of the most successful breeding-groups of L.A. in European Zoos.
“Tusker†(m) *1992/South-Africa
“Sabie†(f) *1992/South-Africa
“Pundaâ€Â(f) *1992/South-Africa
“Numbi†(f) *1992/South-Africa
“Sweni†(f) *1992/South-Africa
“Bongi†(f) *03.06.2005/Zoo Wuppertal – Tusker x Punda
„Kibo“ (m) 09.10.2005/ Zoo Wuppertal – Tusker x Numbi
„Tika“ (f) 13.07.2007/ Zoo Wuppertal – Tusker x Sabie
„Tamo“ (m) 13.01.2008/ Zoo Wuppertal – Tusker x Sweni
Hmm once can be accepted as a mistake but for it to happen twice to the same elephant isn't very good lol
A propos - maybe some elephant-loving zoobeat member makes such a good database for african elephants as asianelephant.net ?Would be great resource. And for rhinos, too
!
A propos - maybe some elephant-loving zoobeat member makes such a good database for african elephants as asianelephant.net ?Would be great resource. And for rhinos, too
!
I think many of these animal libbers have a skewed idea about when animals are ready to breed. Because elephants have a similar lifespan to humans, they equate them with having similar stages of development too, whereas of course there's no reason for doing so..
Coming back to the elephant topic: an elephant is ready to breed when she is ready. Whether she is 6, 8, 12 or 20 is simply irrelevant.
Do not get me started, my friend ... I have the complete listings of both Asian Elephas and African Loxodonta at my disposal ... too!![]()