Zoos 'Consuming' Elephants From the wild
Life expectancy for elephants in zoos is shorter than those in the wild.
Dec. 12, 2008— -- Zoos are "consuming" elephants, says a team of researchers and conservationists who have, for the first time, compared how the captive animals fare in comparison to their wild cousins.
The findings are not good for elephants looking forward to a life in a zoo: their life expectancy is significantly shorter than for those in African and Asian wild or working populations.
Despite the care elephants receive in captivity and the absence of predators, the study found that death rates in Western zoos are greater than birth rates, making the captive elephant population unsustainable. "The zoo population consumes rather than produces elephants," says Georgia Mason of the University of Guelph in Canada.
"We are aware that the zoo population isn't doing as well as we would like it to – that the breeding and survival of young animals is not as good as it should be – and are working hard to address this," says Miranda Stevenson, director of the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums.
Long-Lived Workers
Captive breeding efforts in Europe are just a decade or two old, Stevenson says, and therefore still improving. She believes the captive population helps understand elephant behaviour and physiology so that wild populations can be managed better.
Mason and collaborators compiled data for nearly half the world's population of captive elephants, focusing on 800 female elephants housed in European zoos between 1960 and 2005.
They compared their survival to that of female African elephants in Kenya's Amboseli National Park, and female Asian elephants in the Burmese logging industry.
Female African elephants live on average 16.9 years in zoos, compared to 56 years in Amboseli. When the researchers factored in human-caused deaths in the park, the average lifespan was 36 years – still significantly longer than in zoos.
Premature Deaths
The life expectancy of wild-born Asian elephants was roughly the same whether they were captured and transferred to European zoos or transferred to the Burmese timber industry. Captive-born elephants, however, lived on average 19 years in zoos, compared to 42 years in the logging industry.