Why does the San Francisco Zoo not have elephants?

Yielding to pressure from animal-rights groups, the San Francisco Zoo is giving up its last elephant, marking the first time in the facility’s 75-year history that it will be without at least one pachyderm.

The zoo’s only remaining elephant is being moved to a sanctuary in the Sierra foothills after elected officials voted to require a larger compound for elephants at the seaside attraction.

The 38-year-old elephant named Lulu is the fourth animal to be relocated or to have died in the zoo’s half-acre (2,000-square-meter) elephant compound this year.

The San Francisco County Board of Supervisors said last week that elephants can only return when the zoo builds a larger elephant enclosure of at least 15 acres (6 hectares).

Action applauded
Animal-rights activists applauded the board’s action.

“While no urban environment can meet the vast space requirements of elephants, the new San Francisco standards are an important first step in forcing the zoo to recognize and address the complex needs of elephants,” said veterinarian Elliot Katz, president of the animal-rights group In Defense of Animals.

The zoo’s director, Manuel Mollinedo, expects elephants to return at some point. He planned to seek bonds to help build new pens and was optimistic private donors might contribute to the project.

Closure sought for years
Animal-rights activists have sought closure of the elephant exhibit for years. The dispute intensified in April, when a 44-year-old African elephant died at the zoo. Earlier, zoo officials euthanized an 37-year-old Asian elephant because of a degenerative joint disease and other ailments.

In the wild, elephants may live 50 to 70 years.

Last month, a 38-year-old Asian elephant was moved to a 2,300-acre (930-hectare) sanctuary in San Andreas, where zoo officials will soon relocate Lulu, an African elephant who is beset with health problems.

SAN FRANCISCO — 

As preparations continue to move the last ailing elephant from the city’s zoo, officials say it will be years before visitors see another.

The elephant exhibit is scheduled to close once Lulu, a 38-year-old African pachyderm with chronic health problems, is moved to a sanctuary run by the Performing Animal Welfare Society in the Sierra foothills.

She is the fourth elephant to die or move this year from the antiquated half-acre exhibit. And until the zoo can provide a new elephant enclosure of at least 15 acres, it may not acquire any more, city supervisors decided in an ordinance approved last week.

Supervisors also ordered zoo officials to refurbish the enclosures for polar bears, rhinos, hippos, seals and sea lions before seeking approval for a new elephant exhibit.

“It is, in effect, a de facto ban” on any new elephant exhibit at the 120-acre zoo, said Sean Elsbernd, the only supervisor to vote against the ordinance. “We’re just not going to have elephants at the zoo.”

Animal rights activists hailed the vote as a major victory in their continuing campaign to force zoos across the nation to improve their elephant exhibits or send the animals to private refuges in California and Tennessee.

“While no urban environment can meet the vast space requirements of elephants, the new San Francisco standards are an important first step in forcing the zoo to recognize and address the complex needs of elephants,” said Elliot Katz, a veterinarian and president of In Defense of Animals, based in Mill Valley. “We hope it sparks a national trend of city involvement to force zoos to prioritize the health and well-being of animals over business interests.”

The supervisors’ decision comes after months of tension between elected officials and the zoo’s administrators. In Defense of Animals and other groups have been campaigning for more than five years to close the zoo’s elephant exhibit.

The dispute became more heated last April when Maybelle, a 44-year-old African elephant with numerous health problems, collapsed and died. Less than seven weeks earlier, Calle, a 37-year-old Asian, was euthanized by zoo workers because of her deteriorating health, including degenerative joint disease, a history of tuberculosis and an old injury suffered in a highway crash in Mexico when she was a performer in a traveling circus. Before being moved to San Francisco, Calle spent two years at the Los Angeles Zoo.

Elephants, experts say, often live 50 to 70 years in the wild.

Last month, Tinkerbelle, a 38-year-old Asian, was moved to the animal welfare society’s 2,300-acre private nonprofit sanctuary in Calaveras County, where Lulu soon will join her.

Manuel Mollinedo, director of the zoo, said he doesn’t believe the supervisors’ vote means a permanent end to elephants in San Francisco.

“Putting [elephants] in a 15-acre exhibit would put us on the cutting edge of zoos nationwide” if money to build such an enclosure could be found, he said.

As a first step, Mollinedo said he would ask the supervisors to spend $7 million, which the zoo has left from a $48-million zoo bond issue approved in the mid-1990s, to upgrade the polar bear and other exhibits.

In a performance audit of the zoo in 2000, the city’s budget analyst said those facilities were substandard.

Mollinedo, who has headed the San Francisco Zoo for 10 months, most recently was general manager of the L.A. Department of Recreation and Parks and was director of the L.A. Zoo from 1995 to 2002.

He said he also was optimistic that the San Francisco Zoological Society could raise several million dollars from private sources to build an elephant enclosure. The Zoological Society operates the zoo under contract with the city.

The zoo has about 40 acres currently used for storage that could be used for a new elephant home, he said.

With the departure of Lulu, the San Francisco Zoo will be without an elephant on display for the first time in its 75-year history.

Why don't they have elephants at the zoo?

For example, zoos cannot provide adequate space for elephants. Elephants are, by nature, nomadic creatures that are constantly on the move. In the wild, an elephant will walk up to 9km each day. It is nearly impossible to provide, even an adequate amount of space and exercise, in a captive environment.

What zoo has elephants in California?

The elephants of Monterey Zoo have all been animals that came to us from the circus, carnival and entertainment industries. They were sent here to retire from such industries and live out their lives in a less stressful environment while still enjoying the interaction they received from the humans that cared for them.

Does the Oakland Zoo have elephants?

‍Oakland Zoo is home to three African elephants: Donna, Lisa, and Osh.

Is the SF Zoo ethical?

Our city is recognized for its proactive leadership efforts to ensure humane treatment for animals. Exhibits found throughout the San Francisco Zoo however are criticized for being inhumane and reminiscent of what might be found in third world countries.

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