The Star Malaysia

Wild-captured worker jumbos die young

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PArIs: Asian elephants snatched from the wild and conscripte­d to haul logs in Myanmar’s timber industry live on average five years less than working elephants born in captivity, researcher­s said.

The older an elephant is at the time of capture, the more likely it is to die young, according to an analysis of government logs for 5,150 of the giant mammals – two-fifths of them wildborn – covering the years 1951 to 2000.

The median lifespan for working captive-born males and females was 30 and 45 years respective­ly. Among wild-caught animals, it was half a decade less for both sexes.

The trauma of being drugged or lassoed into submission during capture; the brutal process of “breaking” an animal so it will obey orders; separation from family – all of these factors likely contribute to this foreshorte­ned lifespan, the researcher­s speculated on Tuesday.

“Elephants are affected by longterm stress stemming from their earlier experience­s and new life in captivity,” Mirkka Lahdenpera, a professor at the University of Turku in Finland and lead author of a study detailing the findings, said.

Earlier research has shown that both African and Asian elephants are highly social. Calves separated from mothers, for example, can suffer long-lasting trauma.

For this reason, trafficker­s selling the animals into Thailand’s tourist trade or Myanmar’s logging industry avoid taking calves under five years old that still suckle their mothers.

Currently, there are some 5,000 adult elephants toiling in Myanmar, the vast majority dragging freshly cut tree trunks through the dense jungle to transport hubs and mills.

Because they breed poorly in captivity, there is constant demand for wild specimens.

In Myanmar, the highly valuable animals are protected by government regulation­s that mandate maximum work loads and rest periods.

Timber industry elephants have holidays, maternity leave and a mandatory retirement age.

Most work during the day and are released to forests during the night to forage and socialise with both captive and wild peers.

“Captive-born working timber elephants in Myanmar live as long as wild ones,” Lahdenpera noted.

But the study, published in Nature Communicat­ions, highlighte­d the cost to these majestic creatures of the violent transition from jungle to a life of servitude.

“Wild-caught elephants carry the scars from their capture for a long, long time,” said Lahdenpera.

“We should find an alternativ­e and better methods to boost the captive population­s.”

Asian elephants – Elephas maximus – used to roam across most of Asia, but are today restricted to 15% of their original range. Of the 45,000 remaining, about a third live in captivity.

Elephants are affected by long-term stress stemming from their earlier experience­s and new life in captivity. Mirkka Lahdenpera

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