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Captivity shown to shorten elephants' lives

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Published Date: 12 December 2008
CLEAR evidence that captivity shortens the lives of elephants has been found in a study that could have an impact on zoos around the world.
Scientists, who included researchers from the RSPCA and Zoological Society of London, examined data on more than 4,500 African and Asian elephants.

Those housed in European zoos had life spans up to three times shorter than animals from an Africa
n wildlife park or working in the logging industry in Burma. Zoo elephants were more susceptible to both mental and physical ailments.

Being born in a zoo had a particularly striking effect on Asian elephants, the most at-risk species. They died at a much younger age than animals captured in the wild and brought to zoos, suggesting an unknown factor at work during early infancy or in the womb.

The study focused exclusively on female elephants and included about half the global zoo population from 1960 to 2005. For African elephants, animals in the middle of the survival range had a life span of 16.9 years in zoos compared with 56 years for those dying from natural causes in Kenya's Amboseli National Park.

Mid-range, or median, figures for Asian elephants were 18.9 years for animals born in zoos, and 41.7 years for those in the Burmese logging industry. The findings were reported in the journal Science.





The full article contains 232 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 11 December 2008 9:10 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Mcsnagpile,

12/12/2008 05:34:52
Surprise surprise. Took a long to work out the sums.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 12/12/2008 08:49:57
I wonder if there are similarly shortened life spans for other wild animals kept in zoos?
3

Schot,

12/12/2008 12:54:58
Someone from the RSPCA was just on Ch4 news saying it also applied to apes and other larger mammals, the common factor is the stress of being born free but kept caged. The pretence that these creatures are kept imprisoned for conservation should be dropped and these animals repatriated where possible, or rehomed in more natural enclosures away from the city. The idea that it is educational to show children a distressed, sickly creature in a cage - well, perhaps it does educate them about how selfish and ignorant most grown-ups are.

There will soon be pandas in Edinburgh zoo, reducing the breeding population of an endangered species by two since pandas never breed in western zoos. PT Barnum was more of a conservationist than anyone at Edinburgh zoo.
4

Dr. James Wilkie,

Vienna 12/12/2008 23:13:09
#3. When I was at Schönbrunn Zoo the other day I was able to admire Fu Long, the baby giant panda that was born there a few months ago and is apparently riotously healthy, chewing his bamboo up in the fork of a tree. I am not stating that this proves anything, and his parents are only on loan from China for the purposes of a breeding programme, but it shows that the same experiment in Edinburgh has at least a chance of success.


 

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