lol what i love is the fact that the taronga saga has sooooooooooo many difernt facts and figures! Its not as simple as 'i wish'
whilst a little more room could have (would have) been good, do all you international pople know that gung the male was never going to taronga, the the original import consited of 9 animals- new zeland was involved to.
they had a young female and gung, she was a misbehaving animals, so with no other breeding animals, auckland pulled out all together, so taronga sai o we will take gung, as to not loose an important male. By this time taronga had planned built and been well on the way to completeing an exhibit designed for 4 females!
So gung came in so i think very well the zoo committed an etxra 7 mill to a new exhibit for him!
thats great i think!
with out the prob of a male, the taronga girls were orginally destined to mile sof walks, even proposed swims at the beach. Now with a amle animals, management just comes harder, though hes a nice tempered animals, there still is the management issue of wen ever you go in an exhbit, he must not be, just makes it that little harder. And that was never really put in to the issue of designing.
There a re a million of other bits of info you over seaers wouldnt know, but we'll bring it up wne it comes.
Can anyone expand on my statement.
Also on glyn- do you really see auckalnd sending one of its females over seas, leaving it with an underired old ele on her own, and u really think they would swap for another 50 yr old?
I love this site how we are all talking in hypotheticals! I carnt wait till we run a zoo one day- boy we will have the most co-operable organisations in the world!
Zoo Boy,
Thanks for digging that one up. Point taken. Though I would say your major opponents are at home ... (lol lovable patrick)!
I agree with you that we do not have the full picture here regarding the management and historical perspective side of the equation. I personally am loath to all conspiracy theories being put into the media that have no basis at all. Yet I do think it is healthy we explore the conditions under which the breeding programme should move forward (and ultimately these should be in the best interest of conserving the species locally and globally).
I have a fair bit of experience with the European Elephas maximus programme and I really do think that ARAZPA could benefit from that enormously. Do you know if there is any form of active or tacit coop with the EEP?
Secondly, an international working group affiliated with the captive-breeding programme exists that is primarily involved in researching the captive biology and management of elephants. Minimum exhibit spaces, favored family groupings, matriarch operatives, bull housing and breeding yards, enrichment ... I could go on a myriad ways.
You are quite right to bring into it the suggested course of action with elderly eles - as I did also - that it is simply impractical to have the entire Taronga herd move over to Dubbo (both for the presence of Africans with potential for herpes transmission and the established grouping of elderly eles that preclude the absorption of others).
Re the Auckland move: I would not leave out the elderly elephant out of the equation. It is fairly well established practice in Europe now to have elderly reproductively senescent females that have more or less have a history of sub-optimal social groupings are mixed only with same eles at non breeding locations (all female groupings).
The Auckland move (suggested by glyn) would only be practical if it were a in combination:
A) Moving the elder elephant to Dubbo or Australia Zoo (both of which hold groupings of elderly elephants). Only if that condition can be met given the female's prior history is
B) a parallel movement of the breeding age elephant practical (in this case I wish the ARAZPA Species Coordinator will make recommendations for a move to a breeding location).
Alternatively, C) an elder elephant from mainland Australia could make the move across and D) the breeding age elephant at Auckland can move to a breeding location.
Regarding the ARAZPA breeding programme I sincerely hope that:
i) all breeding age females should be relocated to breeding locations.
ii) those not able to house a bull should be designated non breeding locations and - when choosing to not phase out elephants altogether - should house senescent and non-reproductive all female groupings only.
iii) in future a bull only facility for sub-adult bulls growing up together.
But the latter is just the breeding side of it all (viz reread my comments re management etcetera).
Cheers,
Jelle