Wednesday, August 13, 2008

We will only understand completely, with scientific study and facts

A very respected Circus Fan of America occasionally sends emails with animal related issues, for which I am grateful. He also send's them to two other Circus blogs. He is a true lover of animals, circus, and zoo's I wait a week and if they do don't run on Big Bertha, I post them on what according to trackers is rapidly becoming Big Bertha II. I will not post anonymous or cute names, and anywhere from 12 to 15 of those are censored a day. Apparently there is an interest, and I thank everybody. Nothing pertaining to animals is irrelevant, and only fact's, and open discussion will make it right for them.

How a Few Elephants Turned the Zoo Industry Upside Down


August 2, 2008

Newspapers referred to her simply as “M.” Was this a key anonymous source? An unknown serial killer? Or, maybe, a protected crime victim? In actuality, the answer was none of the above. M. was an elephant, who lived at the Pittsburgh Zoo. An eight-year resident, she had just days earlier attacked a handler. Yet, when questioned by the local media, representatives for the park - who on normal occasions are quite verbose if not braggart when discussing their operations - became strangely tight-lipped and would provide only the first initial of the involved animal. Why all of this mystery?

M. stood for Moja. She was born at the San Diego Zoo in May of 1982. Her mother was Wankie, a 23 year old who had spent most of her life in Southern California. It was her first calf, and the birth was considered a triumph. For Moja was a rarity, one of the few African elephants to have been bred successfully in captivity. The zoological profession could not have been more pleased, and it touted the news far and wide. But for Wankie and her calf, the celebration was to be short-lived - as the latter was shipped in October of the following year to the city zoo in Tacoma, Washington. If some readers are thinking that this does not sound like much time for a mother and daughter to spend together, they would be most correct in doing so. Elephants, especially, are affected by such an abrupt separation.

In pachyderm society, family is everything. Females, for instance, are never alone. Daughters will spend their entire lives with their mothers. These bonds are almost unbreakable, and extend beyond the material world and into the spiritual. Elephants are known to have their own graveyards and complex rituals regarding the treatment of the dead. Visits are made often to these places, and the bones of relatives are touched, caressed, and even carried around. As for male elephants, the maternal bond is equally as strong for the first segment of their lives. But, upon reaching adolescence, males become more independent and begin to venture out from the herd for extending periods of time. Eventually, they never come back and remain solitary - although maintaining friendships with other males is important. Zoos and circuses, however, do not recognize or value the significance of these relations: familial or otherwise. The majority of calves are removed from their mothers by the age of two, if not sooner.

Wankie, for her part, never saw her calf again. She died in 2005, somewhere in the middle of Nebraska on Interstate 80. The Chicago Lincoln Park Zoo, who then owned the elephant, had sold her to Salt Lake City. Evidently, Chicago’s two other elephants, Tatima and Peaches, had just died of mycobacteriosis (a disease causing lameness). Wankie was also infected and dying. Local citizen groups wanted her taken to the sanctuary in Hohenwald, Tennessee. Park officials, however, denied the request. Instead, they sent Wankie on a 1400 mile trip in the back of an unheated semi-trailer. With temperatures dipping below freezing and attendants bickering about whether or not to place a tarp over her crate, Wankie collapsed. She did not get up. Was Moja in her final thoughts?

Back at the Tacoma Point Defiance Zoo, Moja stayed until her sixth birthday when she was sold to a private contractor. Thus began her life in the circus industry. Interestingly, she spent at least one season working alongside Tyke and Elaine for Circus International. She was, in fact, backstage for the infamous 1994 Honolulu performance, wherein Tyke killed her trainer, escaped into the city streets, and was shot to death by police. That trainer was none other than Moja’s current owner: Allen Campbell. Following the incident, the Pittsburgh Zoo stepped forward and offered to purchase the performer. The proposal was accepted, and Moja was shipped to Pennsylvania.

We would not hear from Moja again until the new millennium. The first time was in late 2000. Moja had given birth to a calf eleven months previous, and baby Victoria, as she was named, was preparing to observe her birthday. She would be the first US-born African elephant to survive beyond the age of one since 1985. The next time Moja made the news was in November of 2002. She and Victoria were being led on an early morning walk, when the pair decided to make an unscheduled stop outside of a zoo café. Their handlers did not approve, for any pauses or alterations in the routine were not allowed. Hence, one of them commanded with a raised voice and brandished bull-hook that the two elephants had better move along. Moja and Victoria refused. At some point in the escalating argument, the mother had enough. She knocked the handler down and crushed him. She and her calf then walked away from the scene. Panicking, the zoo alerted city police. Officers arrived and encircled the park, and the Special Weapons and Tactics team fortified the main entrance. In the end, though, this show of force was not needed - as Moja and Victoria were soon boxed in by an assembly of vans and trucks and led back to their enclosure.

The zoo seemed to be at a loss about the attack. Such events, it claimed, were “relatively rare” and “largely unexplained.” The head of the American Zoo and Aquarium Association’s elephant advisory committee added, “I can’t say what would cause the elephant in Pittsburgh to do what it did. It’s very unlike females to behave like that.” One park administrator even pointed out that M. was the zoo’s most docile elephant and a model of subordinate behavior. “She’s never threatened anybody. She’s never postured to anybody.” This last statement, however, was almost immediately proven to be false - as a confidential informant leaked out new information to the press. Ten months previous, M. had injured another trainer during a similar morning walk.

When confronted about the apparent lie, the zoo confirmed that such an incident did occur but that it was “nonaggressive.” M., a spokeswoman clarified, got into a wrestling match with another elephant, and her trainer was knocked over during the fight. This was inadvertent, and the man suffered nothing more than a bruised leg. Was the zoo finally telling the truth? No. For the melee not only left the employee with a severe leg injury and collapsed lung, but this former elephant trainer for the Ringling Brothers Circus was unable to work for three months. Moreover, when he did return to the job, he refused to ever handle another elephant again. The accident was, in his mind, no accident. It did not matter what the zoo said. He knew differently. Moja had injured him on purpose, and the smart move was to avoid all future contact with these animals. Precedent, it seems, was on his side.

Consider, for instance, the case of Shanti at the Brookfield Zoo in suburban Chicago. In February of 1994, this three-year old, captive-born elephant was being moved out of her enclosure when she and her handler both slipped simultaneously on a slick surface. Shanti’s leg fell upon the trainer and the woman received some moderate trauma. “At no time,” though, “did the animal appear to be aggressive towards the keeper.” This was an unfortunate accident. Well, that was Brookfield’s story and officials stuck to it. But, according to a later lawsuit, events transpired in a far different manner. The young elephant, it was described, had snapped her chains and the trainer was trying to re-secure them. When the women slipped to the ground, she was deliberately stepped on and gored. She suffered several broken ribs, a broken sternum, a collapsed lung, and a deep puncture wound. The zoo, not without retort, argued that these injuries were caused, not by Shanti, but by a pair of pliers that the woman was carrying in her back pocket at the time. The handler, nonetheless, won the lawsuit and affirmed to the press that Shanti was quite the “unruly” elephant. Brookfield evidently came to the same conclusion, as Shanti was sold the following year to a private contractor.

Then there was the case of Alice and Cha Cha at the San Diego Zoo. In 1991, a keeper was killed at the park when struck in the head by an elephant. Zoo biologists quickly determined that a fight had broken out between two elephants, Alice and Cha Cha, and this woman had somehow gotten in the way. She was in the wrong place at the wrong time, and her death, while tragic, was accidental. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, however, would perform its own investigation. It found out that the experienced handler was actually in the process of training one of the elephants when another approached and struck her. Was this a mistake? Was Alice trying to hit Cha Cha but missed the target? Perhaps a related incident, one which occurred the same year at the Houston Zoological Garden, could provide a clue. Two pachyderms, Indu and Methai, had engaged in a tussle when a handler stepped in and yelled at the pair to stop. Indu turned around and, “like a bolt of lighting,” charged. She slammed the man into a fence and proceeded to butt him repeatedly with her head. The zoo, after the fact, minced no words. Indu, “depressed and aggressive since watching her newborn calf die two months ago,” had assaulted the man. Indeed, OSHA came to the same conclusion about the incident in San Diego: “animal trainer killed when attacked by elephant.”

But to return to Moja and her fate, she was put into isolation immediately following the attack and kept there until further notice. Pittsburg, like other zoos facing similar circumstances, needed to make a choice. Would it transfer Moja to another institution? Would it sell her to a contractor? Would it place her in a sanctuary? Or would it take a chance and keep her? Ultimately, Pittsburg decided on the latter: the zoo would keep the elephant. Its reasoning was coldly straightforward. “This is,” a spokeswoman explained, “a breeding female African elephant. This is an endangered species.” Moja had already given birth to one calf (who survived), and she might give birth to another (and she did exactly that one week ago). Yet, nagging in the back of their minds, park administrators still had several unresolved problems - all of them involving their elephant and her recalcitrant behavior. As one employee summarized, “she may have learned that she can push a human out of her way, and might do so again when irritated.” So what was the zoo’s solution? The answer lay in protected contact.

Known as PC for short, protected contact is a hands-off system of management. Its mission is to keep a physical barrier between the trainer and the elephant at all times. This not only prevents direct contact between the two parties but also lessens the chance of attack and injury. Walls, fences, wire, and bars - not bull hooks and sticks - provide the means of protection under this system. Significantly, the initial development of PC can be traced to the actions of three individual elephants. The first took place in 1988 at the Brookfield Zoo, when Patience knocked a female trainer to the ground, butted against her, and hurled her into a stone wall. The second transpired two years later at the Knowland Park Zoo in Oakland, California. This time, it was Lisa who ended up confronting the same trainer (whom had since relocated to the Bay Area to become the head keeper) and ripped the woman’s finger off in the process. The final event happened in February of 1991, when another Knowland elephant, Smokey, attacked and killed a separate handler. Cumulatively, these actions forced Oakland administrators into making a radical change in their elephant training methods. In June of 1991, Knowland Park would become the first zoo in the country to adopt PC. Others would soon follow suit. Remember Alice and Indu? Well, their respective institutions would put both of them under this new system of management and quickly. Likewise, at the Pittsburg Zoo, Moja’s second act of resistance initiated a new, permanent policy. All park elephants, henceforth, would be placed under protected contact.



4 comments:

Wade G. Burck said...

This email was sent to me with questions, as there is an assumption that there is something animal related that should not be discussed in an open door policy with qualified individuals, not anonymous. Every person can qualify themselves by studying facts. If you disagree, present your substantiating facts. Nothing can be hidden if we hope to find the answers. And I regard you highly also, my friend.
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During your time with Hawthorn what was the social structure with the elephants? Dominance, fights, connections, etc? I did not want to post this on the blog as it could be considered fodder for the AR groups, but we are all aware that politically correct is never the true story. I was just curious, and if you do not feel comfortable answering I completely understand. Most often the most interesting stories are the ones that cannot - or should not - be shared with the masses.
With high regards,
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These are only my observations and thoughts, on some of the elephants I have been involved with. We had a herd of 8 elephant one named Tess who would fight with an elephant named Delhi at the drop of a hat if you were not watching her, and Delhi would never offer any resistance in the few occasions when it happened. Why just Delhi if it was a "matriarchal" behavior? Why not all elephants. Delhi was obviously not the leader. Bombay who had lived with Delhi her whole life was picketed between Tess and Delhi, and Tess never laid a hand on Bombay. But if given a chance Tess would go behind Bombay to have a go at Delhi, and they had to be kept apart in the act. One "famous" event occurred at Marineland, when I backed Tess up, so Delhi and my wife Margaret could pass. I guess not far enough, because Tess charged Delhi, and knocked her to her knees throwing Margaret into the main pool. One other time, I had them loose grazing, and Tess, who always stayed by herself, all of a sudden ran and knocked Delhi over a chain link fence. Tess could always be called off relatively easy. You tell me because I don't understand why?
Hawthorn purchased 2 elephants named Frieda and Debbie, that gained fame by fighting each other for 2 miles and through a car dealership window on the Clyde Beatty Show, and I only dealt with them later during the " transplant ordeal". This is what I know of Debbie and Frieda. Debbie was one of the biggest, gentlest elephants I have ever seen, just incredible, and Freida was one of the frailest. Frieda was put in PC, and Debbie was put with a small herd with out incidence. Until she and another elephant named Liz also a frail structured elephant, were doing a fair date, and Debbie all of a sudden charged Liz and knocked her through a church window, yet lived with her, and never had an incident again. I don't know why? You will have to tell me that answer also?
When I started working with them again, I was walking the herd of 9 out to the outdoor paddocks, and every day we passed the PC elephant paddock. One day out of the blue Frieda was standing by the edge, and Debbie who was my #8 elephant of the nine, all of a sudden dropped tail and charged, and tried to go over the top rail of the pen after Frieda. I never walk with the lead elephant in a herd, I walk with the last one. I train/establish a leader that I can swing left, right or straight a head by voice while I walk with the last elephant, and occasionally walk up and down the line to maintain order. Why did Debbie , drop tail in front of me with no indication, and go after Freida who she had not been stabled with for over 7 years? I don't know? It is why I have an open mind, and study all I can on the subject?
When loading the elephants for their last trip, a hands off elephant named Misty knocked an elephant name Lota off of her feet
as I was trying to get chains on Misty. She lived with Lota for 5 years and they were constant companions. I don't know why? You will have to offer insight on that also.
Nick and Gyp lived together for 2 years and left together. Gyp who had given birth and spent most of her life around male elephants, quickly established her dominance over a superior male, and given his age of 18 he actually liked being mothered. After the initial introduction which was nothing but pushing and shoving, they settled into a happy home. Unless I tried to do Gyps feet, where Nic could see me. The first time I attempted it I had shifted Gyp into an adjoining pen, and as she stood on the tubs, Nic all of a sudden charged the barrier door and tried to grab, shove, push her off the tubs. Gyp actually tried to go over the door standing on the tubs after him. I was so stunned after it happened and I got them apart that I called Mr. Woodcock and Mr. Hackenburger and asked them if they had ever seen anything like that. Mr. Woodcock said he never had, and couldn't offer anything else. Mr. Hackenburger suggested it may be a male dominance deal between Nic and I and to be cautious. A week later I took her outside and finished her feet. Nic backed up from the door as he was told, and as I raised it to let her in, he charged at her, and it was a battle royale for her to get in the pen with him. They lived together and got on famously, unless I removed Gyp and took her someplace else. Gyp was a magnificent warrior, being around males so much. She would never start a fight, but if told it was alright or she had to defend herself she was unbelievable. Every time I brought her back to Nic, if I had to remove her, we would position ourselves in front of the guillotine door, and Nic would back up as instructed. At the exact moment the door was high enough, I would say, "stop him", which gave her a split second edge as he was coming, and she and I would meet him, and push him back, through the crush, and into the holding pen. To be holding on to the ear of that much power is something I can's describe. Once it was over it left me trembling with tears in my eyes every single time, and I avoided taking her away from him except for 4 times a week, when I walked her with the herd. When she and I were finally inside, everything was fine and he would chirp and make "baby noises", and fondle her and I like a little baby. Nic never showed aggression towards me, but would charge anybody else who came in the barn or if somebody walked up to me when I was watering him. I had to put his chains on for the move my self. If anybody attempted to help, he would charge the bars. I loaded Gyp first, and Nic who had not been PC since he was five, was winched to the transportation truck. Once he was inside, all of a sudden he an Gyp fought terribly, with she being the aggressor, for about 5 minutes, and then all was well. And that is my elephant fight experiences. I don't have the answers, just thoughts. I do know it is the most awesome, earth shattering, God above, display of raw power and pound for pound strength that you will ever want to witness or be a part off. I hope I can gain some insight and knowledge.
Wade Burck

Anonymous said...

Wow Wade, quite a few stories there. Thank you for sharing and you must have know you would catch my attention with tales of elephants. lol. It is refreshing to hear about the lives of these animals from one who worked and lived with them, rather than just from those who "rescued" them. It is very interesting the relations that develop between different individuals in different scenarios. At the St. Louis Zoo it was Clara and Donna who fought for dominance in the group, while Marie had no social status. Rather, she was protected by two others in the group of six. At another zoo the mature breeding bull would be loose in the barn or yard while one of the cows would be tethered in a free contact scenario, because he was the one under control rather than her. I too do not have any answers for why these situatios occur. Some of it may be instinctual, some of it may be captivity-induced. We certainly see that with young, inexperienced first time mothers in captivity that have never been around calves or the birthing experience. Observation is the key to education with these animals. Thank you Wade for your insight.

Anonymous said...

A lot of the problems with zoo elephants is directly related to the politics and staffing of elephant personnel. I have seen this first hand at the zoo's I've worked at. Unqualified people are unqualified no matter where they work with animals, zoo's, circus's, theme parks, etc.

Wade G. Burck said...

Darryl,
I agree with you 100%, but at least the zoo's have started to address it with a "standard", and guidelines. While we as individuals may think they are flawed or not right, at least they have accepted that there is a need for a set of guidelines. Below is a short quote from the "History Channel". How many years have these " spun accidents" been happening: "While in Sarasota the winter of 1949-50 while people were visiting the elephant area, a small child wandered under the guard rail and startled Dolly who was dozing, she then kicked out fatally injuring the child. 50 years later people are still, slip, sliding, tripping, falling, stumbling, etc.
Wade