Sunday, February 26, 2012

Efforts to reduce poaching in Kenya

Some good news on the efforts to reduce elephant poaching from Kenya! 

On Thursday Feb 23, 2012 the NATION reports that Kenya Wildlife Services (KWS) has launched a campaign to protect elephants from poachers. It is a 10 year plan providing a roadmap for conservation and managements of elephants in the country.

“Forestry and Wildlife minister Noah Wekesa told the launch ceremony that the increase in poaching and the level of organisation among illegal ivory traders were worrying.  
“In the light of these worrying trends, we would be calling on the international community to support total ban in  ivory trade in the coming Conference of Parties to the United Nations Convention on Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (Cites) and listing of African elephants on Appendix I of Cites,” Dr Wekesa said.”

It was noted that Kenya lost 278 elephants in 2011 to poachers compared to 177 in 2010. At the same time eight tones of illegally acquired ivory were seized over the last three years.

“The function at the Ivory Burning Site Campsite in Nairobi National Park was attended by conservationists, including representatives of United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP); International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN),Save the Elephants (STE), African Conservation Centre (ACC), universities and other research institutions, communities from different conservation areas and county councils.

The elephant strategy seeks to maintain and expand elephant distribution and numbers, enhance security to elephants, reduce cases of human-elephant conflict and increase the value of elephants to people and habitats.

The strategy seeks to address emerging problems and threats facing elephant conservation in the country. It aims to achieve this by engaging communities living adjacent to protected areas on the importance of protecting the species through education and awareness.”

All in all it sounds like a fantastic project and initiative. Let’s hope it will work on the ground as good as it sounds!


Wednesday, February 22, 2012

War Elephants - new movie

You may want to take a look at the page promoting the upcoming premiere screening of War Elephants in Washington DC - featuring the elephants of Mozambique's Gorongosa National Park.

Dr. Joyce Poole from ElephantVoices joins her brother Bob Poole in his documentary. 

Further down on the page you will find a clip from "Coming of Age with Elephants" from 1996, also filmed by Bob Poole about Joyce's work. Hear Joyce talk about her study of male elephants, starting when she was 19. 

Not to be missed!! 

http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/films/2012/03/14/war-elephants/

Monday, February 20, 2012

Elephants in Voi


It happened last year and I wanted to share this with you; My visit with the elephants in Voi, Kenya.

Do you love elephants? Possibly foster one through the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust? Wonder how these little guys do, once they leave the orphanage in Nairobi? 

 I’m the proud foster-mom of two girls that were rescued and came into the orphanage with all sorts of wounds on their little bodies and disturbing stories. After healing and bonding with the other elephant babies, human keepers and friends for two year, they ‘graduated’ and moved to the stockade in Voi. From here they will have the chance and opportunity to gradually, when they are ready, go back into the bush and live the life of an adult elephant, the way it is suppose to be.

In September I managed to go to the elephants in Voi and it was the most amazing thing to experience them all grown up (after seeing them both as babies at the orphanage) and have a chance to visit with them for a little while out in the bush!

As it happened, without knowing, I ended up with a milk bottle in my hand and one of my girls came straight for me. With tears streaming down my face and a big huge smile, I marveled at the speed she emptied that big milk bottle and how special this all was.

After everybody had its share, we all went off to a small water & mud bath area and were privileged to see these guys have the most amazing time & fun playing with each other, wallowing in the mud. Being so close to them we had a chance to touch them, which, of course, came with getting red mud all over, that I didn’t want to wash off afterward. Crazy, I know. What can I say?! One doesn’t get a chance to ‘hang out’ with baby/teenage elephants often enough, so, wanted to cherish all impressions, smells, mud and all, as long as I could!

One hour went by way to fast, but I had a feeling I managed to split the time well between taking some photos, visiting and watching them. Can’t wait to go back though!!
And maybe, in a few years, they will go off into the bush, meet a strapping wild male elephant, get pregnant and bring back the baby to show off; which happened just recently with another former orphan. I would be very proud!

Meeting & visiting a little bit with the wonderful, amazing keepers at the Voi stockade was also a highlight! These men are the most dedicated people you can find; they are with the elephants literally all day and keeping a close eye on them at night. (at the orphanage in Nairobi, one keeper sleeps in each stockade with the babies.) 

The babies look at them as their extended family and it happened many times now that once they are back in the bush and have a baby, they will come back to the stockade to show of their baby's to their human family!! Usually they bring some of their complete wild friends and everybody joins into the reunion! Incredible, if you ask me.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Keeping captive Elephants healthy

In an attempt to keeping captive elephants healthy, researchers are coming up with different methods to take the temperature of elephants.
 
Here is a report by Andy Wilson, Vision System Design (& thanks to 'Save the Elephants' for distribution) about the latest developments.

"Many of our readers will be familiar with the principle of operation of thermal imaging (infrared) cameras and how they can be used in a variety of applications ranging from determining the thermal loss of buildings, detecting specific gases, or monitoring production processes.

But like me, most people might be surprised to hear that a group of researchers from the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada) are now using such cameras to study the thermoregulation of animals such as elephants.

That's right. As a member in the Department of Animal and Poultry Science (APS), Esther Finegan and her students have filmed elephants in Busch Gardens zoological park in Florida with a thermal imaging camera to see how and when they store and radiate heat. She and her students are now pioneering similar thermoregulation studies at the Toronto Zoo.

While the use of thermal imaging will undoubtedly prove to be an invaluable tool that will enable zookeepers and landscape architects to better design the animals surroundings to keep them happy and healthy, this isn't the only means by which researchers have measured the temperature of such beasts.

Last year, for example, scientists at the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology (FIWI) at the University of Veterinary Medicine (Vienna, Austria) showed that Asian elephants respond to high daytime temperatures by significantly lowering their body temperature during the cooler night hours. By doing so they create a thermal reserve that allows them to store heat and so prevent heat stress as temperatures rise during the day.

To reach that conclusion, they fed small telemeters to a group of captive elephants in Thailand and a group at the Munich Zoo Hellabrunn to monitor temperatures in the animals' gastrointestinal tract. The telemetry system, which permits the continuous recording of temperature, had previously been developed at the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology.

Statistical analysis of the data confirmed that while the overall mean body temperature was similar in both the Thai and the German elephants, fluctuations in body temperature were on average twice as large in the Thai animals as in the German ones. The Thai animals had both a higher daily peak temperature and a lower minimum temperature, which the scientists related to the higher mean ambient temperatures in Thailand.

In fact, the body temperature of the Thai elephants dropped at night to well below the normal average, meaning that Thai elephants start the day with a much larger thermal reserve than their German counterparts.

It just goes to show that, just as there's more than one way to skin a cat, there is also more than one way to take the temperature of an elephant. But if I were an elephant, I'd probably prefer the noninvasive image-processing approach rather than ingesting a telemetry system."
 
 
 

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Why Elephants?!

Elephants have been a passion of mine for quite some time now. It has put me on a path to educate myself, study, volunteer for elephant/human relation projects & ever growing love for them.

Of the three different elephant species existing today, most of my own personal experience is with African elephants, although my heart beats faster after spotting any species. – I have sat watching them, in close proximity for hour after hour, day after day, endlessly fascinated by the intricate details of their life.

To me, it’s all about the appreciation of nature, humans, and the animal kingdom living together in peace and harmony!!

When it comes to animals, Elephants just happen to be at the top of my list. ;-)

"Elephant Destiny--Biography of an endangered species in Africa" by Martin Meredith is one of the best books I have read about elephants and their place in history. 

It is a must-read for any elephant lover or someone who would like to understand how and when it all happened that these magnificent creatures became hunted and used for war and ivory.

I mentioned earlier that there are three remaining elephant species on this planet: the African elephant (Loxodonta), the Asian cousin (Elephas), and the so-called 'forest elephant', which is now mainly confined to the rainforests of western and central Africa.

There are very interesting differences between the African elephant and the Asian elephant, besides the obvious ear size:

- The African elephant is generally heavier and taller. They can weigh up to six tons (13,000 pound) and reach eleven feet or so at the shoulder.

- The African elephant’s back is concave or saddle-shaped, whereas the Asian’s is convex or straight.

- The African has immense triangular ears that extend beyond the neck; the ears of the Asian are comparatively small.

- The African has a flat forehead, and carries its head high; the Asian has a twin-domed forehead, and carries its head low.

- Repeated skin folds or 'rings' mark the African trunk and at its tip are two finger-like projections; the Asian’s trunk is smoother and ends in only one 'finger'.

- African elephants of both sexes usually carry tusks; with Asian elephants, tusks are confined mostly to males.


It is the most interesting and fascinating thing to watch a herd of elephants interact and go about their daily activities and to realize, that many behaviors are so closely related to the human world. 

Specifically if it comes to the topic of children, teenagers, dynamics between adults, affections for one another and having fun!

There is a story that gives an idea about the distance these animals can communicate with each other and it happened in Zimbabwe.

At a private wildlife sanctuary adjacent to the Hwange National Park a group of about 80 elephants, a familiar sight to tourist at the lodge, disappeared one day. That same day a culling operation (controlled killings of whole elephant families/groups) had started in the National Park 90 miles away! Several days later the missing elephants were found at the opposite corner of the sanctuary as far away from the park boundary and the culling process as they could be.

The story itself is a sad one, but the abilities these beings have is absolutely amazing to me! Always think we could learn a thing or two from them!

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Fun facts about Elephants

To start us off on the right track, here are “14 fun facts about Elephants”, published by Smithsonian.com today, Jan 3rd, 2012 http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/science/2012/01/14-fun-facts-about-elephants/

1) African and Asian elephants are sometimes thought to differ only by the location of the animals, but, evolutionarily speaking, they are species as separate as Asian elephants and woolly mammoths.
2) The elephant’s closest living relative is the rock hyrax, a small furry mammal that lives in rocky landscapes across sub-Saharan Africa and along the coast of the Arabian peninsula.
3) African elephants are the largest land mammals on the planet, and the females of this species undergo the longest pregnancy—22 months.
4) Despite their size, elephants can be turned off by the smallest of critters. One study found that they avoid eating a type of acacia tree that is home to ants. Underfoot, ants can be crushed, but an elephant wants to avoid getting the ants inside its trunk, which is full of sensitive nerve endings.
5) Elephants don’t like peanuts. They don’t eat them in the wild, and zoos don’t feed them to their captive elephants.
6) Female elephants live in groups of about 15 animals, all related and led by a matriarch, usually the oldest in the group. She’ll decide where and when they move and rest, day to day and season to season.
7) Male elephants leave the matriarch groups between age 12 and 15. But they aren’t loners—they live in all-male groups. In dry times, these males will form a linear hierarchy that helps them avoid injuries that could result from competing for water.
8) Asian elephants don’t run. Running requires lifting all four feet at once, but elephants filmed in Thailand always kept at least two on the ground at all times.
9) An African elephant can detect seismic signals with sensory cells in its feet and also “hear” these deep-pitched sounds when ground vibrations travel from the animal’s front feet, up its leg and shoulder bones, and into its middle ear. By comparing the timing of signals received by each of its front feet, the elephant can determine the sound’s direction.
10) Like human toddlers, great apes, magpies and dolphins, elephants have passed the mirror test—they recognize themselves in a mirror.
11) Elephants can get sunburned, so they take care to protect themselves. “Elephants will throw sand on their backs and on their head. They do that to keep them from getting sunburned and to keep bugs off,” Tony Barthel, curator of the Elephant House and the Cheetah Conservation Station at Smithsonian’s National Zoo, told Smithsonian.com. To protect their young, adult elephants will douse them in sand and stand over the little ones as they sleep.
12) Stories of African elephants getting drunk from the fermented fruit of the marula tree are not true, a study concluded. The animals don’t eat the fruit off the ground where it ferments, the fresh fruit doesn’t stay in the elephant’s digestive tract long enough to ferment, and even if an elephant did eat the fermented fruit, it would take 1,400 pieces to get one drunk.
13) Elephants have evolved a sixth toe, which starts off as cartilage attached to the animal’s big toe but is converted to bone as the elephant ages.
14) Some farmers in Kenya protect their fields from elephants by lining the borders with beehives. Not only are their crops saved, but the farmers also get additional income from the honey.
By Sarah Zielinski

My little contribution is as follows:

On 1) there is actually a 3rd species, the Forest Elephants, and they are found from Sierra Leone to the Democratic Republic of Congo. They are a little smaller, tend to have straight tusks and they gather in large groups in clearings in the forest known as "bais". At the bais they are able to obtain mineral salts by digging down into the soil.

On 2) some people doubt this and argue that….’ this is true to a certain extent, but misleading since the relationship stems from a remote ancestor common to hyraxes, sea cows (dugongs and manatees) and elephants.’ Looks to me like a bit more research is in order!

On 4) ….and they are  VERY irritated by African bees! If coming across them, it sends the elephants off in a frenzy!

On 6) sometimes the groups can be even smaller. It could be just a mom with her calves of different age groups. It often is closely related to the area they live in, hence food to find, drought etc

On 9) Caitlin O’Connell made this discovery and you can read about it in her book ‘The Elephant’s Secret Sense’. Very interesting!

On 14) Dr. Lucy King with Save the Elephants has done extended research on this and won the CMS Thesis Award for her work just recently.

Until next  time.

Elephant news with a positive spin

Elephants; lots has been said about them and, I’m sure lots will follow. Especially now, as we are at the start of the New Year 2012 and it was just released that 2011 was the worst year for elephants in regards to being poached, ie. killed for their tusks/ivory. The numbers are staggering, which makes the rate they are being killed off and disappearing mind-boggling & very frustrating to say the least.

After having said that, this blog will be highlighting and focusing on the positive aspects and news about these amazing beings, which I happen to care for and love very much.

There will be news about the current state of course, but not JUST! 

I hope you will come along & enjoy following my quest in finding the positive for our efforts in saving Elephants!