Elephant's death a crossroads for zoo
2009-12-03
Josh Wingrove, Globe & Mail
After four deaths in four years, the Toronto Zoo's elephant herd is down to
three - a number considered to be the bare minimum for the good of the animals,
leaving management to decide whether to pursue getting new ones or to phase out
its exhibit.
At 7:30 a.m. yesterday, zoo staff arrived for work to find 41-year-old Tara,
described as the matriarch of the elephants, lying down in her enclosure. They
couldn't get her back on her feet, and she died around 11 a.m.
The cause of Tara's death is unknown. Her body was left in the pen for a few
hours to allow the other elephants to grieve her death. An autopsy has been
scheduled, and she'll be buried later.
Tara was one of the zoo's first three elephants when it opened in 1974, and is
the latest of the Toronto elephants to die. Patsy, 40, was euthanized in July of
2006, suffering from debilitating arthritis. Tequila, 38, was found dead in her
pen last year, while Tessa, 40, died six months ago. An African elephant can
live up to 70 years, but Toronto's zoo pegs its elephants' life expectancy at 40
to 45. Tara, at 41, lived longer than any elephant the zoo had.
The Toronto Zoo herd is now a trio: Thika, who is 29 and expected to succeed
Tara as the herd's leader, and the aging pair of Iringa and Toka, who both turn
40 next year. Because of the social nature of the female elephants, three is the
minimum recommended by the American Association of Zoos and Aquariums, of which
Toronto is an accredited member.
Tara's death has brought Toronto to a fork in the road. It will have to decide
whether to add new animals to the zoo's elephant program or shutter it
altogether. City Councillor Raymond Cho, who is chairman of the Toronto Zoo
Board of Management, said the issue will be discussed at a Dec. 10 board
meeting.
"We have to really pay attention to [the question]: 'What is our future plan?' I
cannot add anything more. But we'd like to have a very serious discussion in the
upcoming board meeting," Mr. Cho said in an interview.
Eric Cole, supervisor of the Toronto Zoo's Savannah section, said it's too early
to guess about the elephant program's future.
"We wouldn't even think about that right now. When we've lost an elephant,
obviously we reassess, and we look at the remaining elephants and how the
dynamic plays out," a sombre Mr. Cole said.
However, Julie Woodyer, a former OSPCA investigator who is now campaigns
director for the watchdog Zoo Check Canada, said Toronto's northern climate is
ill-suited for elephants despite the Toronto Zoo's mixed indoor-outdoor
enclosure.
"This is the thing about this - 40 [years old] is not old for an elephant, if
that elephant were to live in the wild or even a large enclosure in a southern
climate," Ms. Woodyer said.
"Canada is not elephant friendly... If they [Toronto Zoo management] want to
move into the next century as far as animal care [and] conservation are
concerned, they have to realize that certain species are not meant for the
Canadian climate.
"The fact is, they should probably phase out their elephant program in Toronto."
Her suggestion would face opposition from Mr. Cho, who hopes the city keeps its
exhibit.
"I love elephants," he said. "[The] Toronto Zoo is a world zoo. We like to have
representative animals of all the continents."
The Calgary Zoo is in the same bind - it's also part of the AZA and is down to
three elephants, although they are younger than Toronto's. Calgary curator Tim
Sinclair-Smith said the zoo's elephant program is popular and helps with
research into diseases affecting the at-risk species. It's not going anywhere.
"We're certainly continuing with the program. There's no reason for us not to,"
he said, adding that the zoo would support Toronto deciding to do the same.
If Toronto or Calgary were to lose another elephant and be left with just two,
the AZA wouldn't immediately revoke its membership status if there was a plan to
phase the program out or add an animal, AZA spokesman Steve Feldman said.
Noting the autopsy on Tara hasn't been completed, he said there's "no specific
evidence that cold weather has harmful effects" on the animals.
Other northern zoos have phased out their programs, and there are two general
strategies by which to do so.
One is to stop acquiring elephants, but keep the remaining ones, as was done at
Edmonton's Valley Zoo. It's not an ideal situation. The city now has just one
elephant, Lucy, and has found itself the target of legal challenges and
high-profile pleas from former Price is Right host Bob Barker to move the
lonesome animal to a place with other elephants.
The other option would be to ship the remaining elephants to a more appropriate
climate. The Detroit Zoo did this in 2005, saying it could no longer provide for
the "physical, social and psychological needs" of its two elephants, Winky and
Wanda. They were moved to a California sanctuary.
Mr. Cole said staff are stunned by the death of Tara, and the three that
preceded it.
"It's a shock. It's really devastating for us to lose that amount of elephants
in that time," he said. "We might get another elephant from another zoo in North
America, we might not ... We don't know, so we just have to wait and see."
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