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Orphan elephants go on the rampage

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Orphan elephants go on the rampage
20 July 1996
By Eddie Koch
Johannesburg
LIKE children, young elephants need discipline if they are to grow up as responsible
members of society. Wildlife biologists say that orphan bull elephants in South
Africa’s Pilanesberg Game Reserve have turned delinquent because they have never
been taken in hand by their elders.
Rogue elephants have become a serious problem in Pilanesberg, a small wildlife
reserve about 250 kilometres northwest of Johannesburg. Earlier this
month, a young bull charged a group of tourists on a photo-safari. The next day the same
elephant attacked and killed a professional hunter who had been sent to shoot it. These are
not isolated incidents. Two years ago another tourist was attacked, chased out of his
battered car, and trampled to death in the
reserve.
Humans are not the only victims: in the past three years, 19 white
rhinoceroses have been gored to death by elephants in Pilanesberg. Park rangers have also
seen bull elephants trying to mount rhino cows.
Scientists working for the Rhino and Elephant Foundation (REF), based in Johannesburg,
have now completed a study of the problem, and think they can explain the elephants’
aberrant behaviour. Clive Walker, chairman of the foundation, says that in each incident
the rogue animal was from a group of young male elephants brought into Pilanesberg
from the Kruger National Park in the early 1980s—after the rest of their herd was culled
as part of an
effort to control Kruger’s burgeoning elephant population.
“We believe the stress these animals have been subjected to along with the fact that
they have never been subjected to the discipline and nurturing of a matriarchal cow,
which is a central feature of normal elephant family life, accounts for their
behaviour,” says Walker.
Marion Garaï, coordinator of the REF’s elephant research programmes,
says that some of the orphan elephants attached themselves to a herd of rhinos after
arriving in Pilanesberg. As they grew into young bulls, they tried mating with rhino
cows. “Either through frustration or territorial aggression, the elephant bulls then turned
on the rhino cows,” says Garaï.
Garaï agrees that a lack of discipline from older animals helped turn
the elephants into delinquents. “A contributing factor is the absence of older bull
elephants, who are known to discipline aggressive young bulls during the mating
season,” she says.
The park’s small size may also have played a part, however. The Pilanesberg Game
Reserve covers only about 35 000 hectares and is heavily stocked with large mammals. It
is also visited by a great number of tourists because of its
proximity to Johannesburg and a casino complex—which may place the animals under
stress. “These could be additional factors that cause territorial aggression and unusual
elephant-rhino interaction,” says Garaï.
The South African National Parks Board has now suspended its annual elephant cull in
Kruger, largely in response to pressure from international animal
welfare groups. Only whole families of elephants will be moved from the park to other
game reserves, which should mean that young bulls will continue to receive the strict
parental discipline they need.
© Copyright New Scientist Ltd.
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