For these majestic beasts, this life of relative leisure at the
200-acre Center for Elephant Conservation comes after years on the
road, entertaining America in "The Greatest Show on Earth" for
Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus. Under pressure of animal
rights activists, the circus is now phasing the animals out of its
show.
In March, the circus company announced with some reluctance that it
would end its elephant acts by 2018. It said it wanted to use the
retired animals to help save their endangered species through
breeding and medical research.
"If we didn’t do it, the elephants would go extinct in North
America, likely in 25 years or less," said Kenneth Feld, chief
executive officer of the circus' owner, Feld Entertainment.
Animal welfare groups, which for years have accused the circus of
mistreating the elephants, are still not satisfied and have
questioned the company's current plan.
"Certainly it's an improvement to take the elephants off the road,
but Ringling should immediately retire all its elephants to real
sanctuaries instead of a bogus breeding farm in Florida," said
Rachel Mathews, legal counsel to People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals. "They should be allowed to just be elephants."
DWINDLING POPULATION
Asian elephants, which are smaller and rarer than the African
variety, have long been an audience favorite under the big top.
Fewer than 40,000 Asian elephants remain in the wild. About 250 are
in captivity in the United States, 26 of which were born over the
past 20 years at Ringling facilities.
The ranch-like property in central Florida where 29 of the circus
company's 42 Asian elephants now live is about an hour’s drive south
of The Villages, the sprawling human retirement destination and
golfer’s paradise.
The elephants spend their days outdoors in fenced enclosures where
they are in sight or earshot of one another and enjoy loaves of
white bread as an occasional treat. At night they stay in large
barns, with their feet often chained to keep them from stealing each
other's food.
But the animals have not left their former lives behind altogether.
They continue to receive training to make them easier to manage,
staff said.
The elephants are still trained to lie down, which allows workers
scrub them, and to put a foot on a stool, which helps in grooming
their toenails.
Their close interaction with trainers allows the staff to easily
take weekly blood samples from the large veins behind their ears.
The blood is used to monitor the elephants' health and provide
specimens for research.A Ringling spokesman could not say how many,
if any, elephants had been officially retired since the
announcement, only that the company still has 13 performing in three
units.
[to top of second column] |
Feld said he was saddened by the decision to remove the elephants,
which have been fixtures in circus shows for more than a century,
but the company is committed to helping protect and preserve the
species.
One example is the elephant conservation center's work with the
Smithsonian’s National Zoo. The aim is to improve the diagnosis and
treatment of a herpes virus that kills 20 percent of elephant calves
born in North America, said veterinarian Dennis Schmitt, Ringling's
director of research.
On reproduction of the species, Ringling has established a Genomic
Resource Bank for Asian elephants and has achieved a live birth
through artificial insemination.
The center, which is not open to the public, has also helped in
cancer prevention efforts for humans.
Despite a far-greater body mass and far more cells than humans, the
lifetime cancer mortality risk for elephants is less than 5 percent,
compared with 11 percent to 25 percent in humans, according to a new
study published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
The study, whose lead author is Dr. Joshua Schiffman of the
University of Utah's Huntsman Cancer Institute, used blood samples
from Ringling elephants.
Maintaining the elephants costs Feld's company $69,000 per animal
per year. Despite the expense, he said preserving the species both
in its native habitat and in North America was important for future
generations.
"We bring things to you that you normally can't see," said Feld, who
is still considering how the retired elephants might interact with
the public in a new way. "Most people can't afford to go to Sri
Lanka."
(Editing by David Adams, Frank McGurty and Lisa Von Ahn)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |