IDA: Writing Alert: Seattle’s Zoo: Free Bamboo

June 23rd, 2006 9:16 am by Kelly Garbato

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: In Defense of Animals – alerts [at] idausa.org
Date: Jun 19, 2006 3:22 PM
Subject: Writing Alert: Seattle’s Zoo: Free Bamboo

Congratulations to volunteer writers Darcy Silver and Chantelle Wallace, whose letters to the editor about the death of Gita, the elephant at the L.A. Zoo were printed in the Los Angeles Times.

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer ran an editorial about the Woodland Park Zoo and Bamboo, an elephant who was shuffled to the Point Defiance Zoo last year and has now been transferred back. Please write a letter to the editor of the Post-Intelligencer on the suffering elephants endure in zoos. Send letters to the Post-Intelligencer at editpage [at] seattlepi.com.

Click here to read “Seattle’s Zoo: Free Bamboo” online.

You can use the following points to help you in your letter or visit www.savezooelephants.com for more information.

- Zoos routinely move elephants, and other animals, from one zoo to another with little to no consideration for their social bonds. In the wild female elephants never leave their mothers and male elephants have complex social structures with other bulls and females. No elephant in the wild lives in constant solitary confinement.

- Elephants are highly complex, social animals who live in extended family groups and travel over thirty miles a day. Today’s zoos are unable to meet the physical and social needs of elephants. These needs include space, adequate exercise, and extended social groups.

- Elephants in zoos suffer from captivity-induced physical and psychological health problems due to lack of space. Health problems include debilitating foot and joint problems, arthritis, digestive disorders, stereotypic behaviors (neurotic behaviors resulting from severe confinement). Other problems include reproductive system shutdown, and high infant mortality rate.

- The AZA, a zoo industry trade organization, provides a set of standards that are insufficient for the proper maintenance of elephants. These standards include a minimum outdoor enclosure size of 1,800 square feet for one elephant, the equivalent of six parking lot spaces. The standards also allow the prolonged chaining of elephants.

- As the largest land mammal, elephants are genetically designed to move and forage most of the day; this constant movement is necessary for their psychological and physical well-being.

- Historically elephants have been managed through coercive force, such as chaining for prolonged periods and use of bullhooks and electrical hotshots; this abuse is unacceptable.

_______________________

Letters should be less than 200 words. Please do not send attachments and please remember to include your full name, address, and phone number (for verification purposes–street names and phone numbers will not be published) and not to use any wording in this alert.

Thanks and good luck!

Sincerely,

Kristie Phelps
Program Coordinator

Visit the web address below to tell your friends about this.

ga0.org/indefenseofanimals/join-forward.tcl

If you received this message from a friend, you can sign up for In Defense of Animals Action Center.

In Defense of Animals 3010 Kerner, San Rafael, CA 94901 Tel.: 415 388 9641 Fax: 415 388 0388
email: ida [at] idausa.org

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