yes it does, in every one of the articles Monty posted links to.Oh wow how Terible hope she survives. Does it state any where who the elephant was ?
Interesting that this was a young bull born here. I was recently reading Dan Koehl's blog and read how elephants born in captivity are more dangerous than wild caught ones. There was records of many captive born elephants becoming to dangerous to handle and in those days killed as they were worthless if unable to be handled. Presumably the elephants handled from when they are born consider people as equals and therefore treat them like another elephant. The familiarity leads to elephants trying to be dominant which is not good for peoples health.
How will Australian zoos cope if they breed a lot of elephants which are protected contact only. Will that be sustainable in city zoos with limited space.
I haven't activly joined a discussion here in quite a while. But I fully agree with Monty's view. Gajah69, with Monty being a total 'elephant outsider' even he is free to give his views.
In the works by behaviour scientists like Dr Susan Friedman we look at what can be measured and observed in a situation and Monty is doing just that. By baseing what we know on assumed knowledge and preconcieved ideas it only sets us up to fail.
I respect that this may be a very touchy subject if a family member was involved, but where was this newly found sensitivity when the Elephants were removed from Stardust, the big cat incidents at Zion, the list goes on and on.
We design our opinions by what we can see and observe, so why should a Government Zoo be excluded.
I have never worked Elephants, but I have worked many other animals and as we all know, incidents aren't caused by 'Bad' animals but by 'Lazy' Trainers.
I reinterate my insensitive comment."Lazy trainers'. You too labelling someone when you weren't there and you don't have all the facts. This is my issue,speaking/speculating of something when you have no experience and weren't there. I also think if Monty wishes to respond he can without being propped up by an administrator of this forum. I haven't said anything about it being a government zoo or any reference to the other incidents. My comment was specifically directed at Monty's rapid response to an incident that has left the keeper in a critical condition. Where is the humanity?. Maybe after you work elephants and have been exposed to a similar incident, your opinions would be different.
All of us here at the Darling Downs Zoo send our best wishes to Lucy and our hope that she has a speedy and complete recovery from her injuries.
Our thoughts are also with the elephant team at Taronga at this challenging time.
Sydney's Taronga Zoo has been ordered to take added safety measures after a keeper was seriously injured by an elephant.
Lucy Melo, 40, remains in a critical but stable condition in Royal North Shore Hospital after the two-year-old Asian elephant calf Pathi Harn pinned her against a bollard on Friday morning.
NSW's work safety watchdog, WorkCover NSW, is investigating the incident and issued a notice to the zoo requiring it to "review procedures when working with elephants and implement safety measures to prevent similar incidents".
The zoo has also launched an investigation.
A WorkCover spokesman told AAP the zoo had been given time to adopt the safety measures, and WorkCover inspectors would check on compliance.
The zoo said in a statement on Monday that its elephant handling procedures were being determined in concert with WorkCover representatives until the investigations were concluded.
It said the zoo was focusing on supporting Ms Melo and other keepers and "undertaking its own investigation to understand better how the incident occurred, and identify any learnings for the future".
Animal rights activists have called on the zoo to change its elephant handling practices following Friday's incident.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has sent a letter to zoo director Cameron Kerr asking the zoo to switch to a "protected contact system" of elephant handling.
PETA Australia campaigns director Jason Baker said in the letter the system did not use physical punishment and employed barriers such as metal screens or bars "to always separate elephants and handlers".
Co-operative behaviour was rewarded with treats, while aggression and other non-compliant behaviour was never punished but simply ignored, Mr Baker said.
In response, the zoo said its conservation programs for elephants had always been based on keepers rewarding co-operative behaviour through "operant conditioning".
"Taronga already manages its elephants in both free and protected contact depending on individual animal requirements," it said.
Ms Melo was engaged in a routine training session teaching the elephants how to wash when she was "challenged" by Pathi Harn.
She was still conscious and talking when paramedics first arrived but lapsed into unconsciousness and had a cardiac arrest for about five minutes.
A veterinary behaviour expert said earlier that Pathi Harn may have been testing his keeper's authority.
I hope the victim will be out of the woods soon and make a speedy recovery, but I am not at all surprised that someone got badly injured by an elephant in Taronga. This was expected to happen with so many elephants incl. young bulls in direct contact.
I disagree that it is disrespectful to discuss what happened. In contrary the consequences of this accident need to be discussed right now before the a keeper gets killed by Pathi Harn or another elephant in Taronga. Or Melbourne, I am pretty sure that they keep all females and calves in direct contact too.
Neither this accident nor Helen Schoefield`s death earlier this year in New Zealand were unpredictable nor unavoidable.