Dzanga Forest Elephants

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Rash of Births

Category: Elephants, Forest | Date: May 19 2009 | By: dzangaforestelephants

My apologies for not blogging for a couple of months, work has been non-stop and access to the internet is always an obstacle to a lot of us living in remote areas with few amenities. Contrary to conventional wisdom we are not all connected.

The big news is that on May 1st we witnessed the first elephant birth at the Dzanga Clearing in nineteen years. I had always suspected that birthing was a private affair and after what we witnessed in the clearing I now understand clearly why that is probably the case. The mother, Maureena, is well known to us and had been in the clearing for a couple of days preceding the birth. She is part of a big family group that was fragmented in 2001 when I think the matriarch of the group and her adult daughter were killed. They were regular visitors to the clearing and then they abruptly disappeared. Other members of the group which included juvenile and subadult females and males kept in contact and alerted me to the situation. The family remained as intact as it could and now several of the females have attained maturity and have their own calves.

On the day of the birth Maureena was seen opposite from where we do our observations, in a pool of water used by the elephants in the clearing. I didn’t see the actual birth but one of the tourists, a young Frenchman, said to me “That female just had a baby.” I immediately dismissed what he had said when I say Maureena standing over this tiny calve wrapped in a bundle of white skin which she was trying to pull away from the baby. I captured this behavior on video tape as Maureena pulled away the skin freeing the newborn. Maureena ate all of the tissue. The calf was lying there in the pool desperately trying to stand up without too much success. Then havoc happened with many of the surrounding elephants approaching the calf to touch and smell it and in some instances trying to help it to its feet. Poor Maureena had difficulty keeping contact with the calf with a continual approach of other females and young crowding and confusing the situation. One of the younger bulls who was obviously confused tried repeatedly to mate with Maureena and at one point mounted her and then fell falling on the newborn. No damage was done and I think that might have been due to the calf being in a very muddy area which cushioned the fall. The chaos continued and it piqued the interest of all the elephants in the clearing.

Then to my right I noticed the entrance of Maureen, another member of Maureena’s group. She entered the clearing from the south with her two young calves and headed directly to Maureena and the newborn. She helped protect the calf from the crowds and we could see the newborn under Maureen’s legs while the young bull pestered Maureena. Maureen was able to move the calf from the central saline to the edge of the bai since the calf was able to stand and move, this being about thirty minutes after the birth. It was then the end of our observations and we left concerned about the calf’s safety but content that Maureen was present with the newborn and seemed to be in control of all the interested elephants.

Before we witnessed this birth at Dzanga we had been seeing many very new calves of one to three days old, something I had never seen before. A copule of the females we had seen in the clearing without newborns had given birth and then one or two days later they would appear with the newborn. This happened at least five times during the period of early April and into May. It’s always a wonderful sight to see a female one knows with a new calf and when the calf is only a day old it is extraordinary especially when we didn’t even suspect she was pregnant.

I’ve included some photos of the newest additions to the Dzanga population. All of these calves are less than a week old. The center photo is of Medina II and that calf was a day old when the photo was taken.

Newborn WD.jpgMedina II & nb WD.jpgAlika I WD.jpg

3 Responses to “Rash of Births”

Annie, on 19 May 2009

How absolutely precious are those babies? so cute!!!!!!

TheTeach, on 01 Jul 2009

It’s refreshing to see new elephant life at the bai. It seems the news on elephants, everywhere, these days, has become so dark that it’s really hard to absorb, and still keep a chin up. What’s being perpetrated against them by humanity is really a crime against God and all of nature. I hope humanity will get out of the shopping mall and rise to the occasion of saving these guys, and a host of other issues, before its too late. Some people just don’t get it. The richness and wealth of life isn’t found in a bank account, or in an ivory trinket. It’s in the beauty and grandeur of the amazing natural, living world all around us in which we have the daily opportunity to partake, enjoy and appreciate. Why are so many missing the point and ruining the planet for those that do understand? How can the most intellectually advanced species on the planet be so short sighted and shallow so much of the time? A question for the ages. What will be left of anything at the table when humanity is finished with supper? TheTeach

TheTeach, on 01 Aug 2009

Andrea,
Let’s have an update if there is news to report! :)
The recent news out of neighboring Cameroon, Nigeria, and Chad has seemed rather abyssmal regarding forest elephants. On the other hand, sometimes I wonder if some of the posts may actually put the animals in danger by advertising their presence and location to the bad guys. That’s definitely something to think about. There’s something to be said about the benefits of public awareness of the plight vs. the fear of poacher awareness of potential hunting grounds. (It’s possible to educate the public about the animals and their habitats in general terms, without revealing specific locations and foraging routes) The reason I say this is because I remember reading about “The Forgotten Herd” of Zakouma in the March 2007 National Geographic. That ivory war was well underway, but it seemed to escalate totally out of control within a year after the article was published. It was a great article and i loved the photos, but it certainly broadcast to the WORLD where to find the “forgotten herd.” Forgotten no more and perhaps soon to be extinct (less than 1000 remain from an original count of 3500 in 2006 was it?) I didn’t even know there were elephants in Chad until I read that article, so it probably came as a surprise to others as well. I don’t know. I’m not faulting National Geographic here, it’s just that in hindsight, that article seems like it may have been a flashing neon sign for the poaching gangs and the illegal wildlife trade brokers who fund their activities and conduct smuggling. I cringe at the idea of that magazine being sold at a newstand in Hong Kong, perhaps, just down the street from an ivory carving dealership. It seems that nowadays, perhaps the locations of specific groups of animals or herds would be better kept a secret (to the general public), if the security of their sanctuaries is easily compromised, and their lives put at risk. Having said that, I do want to cheer on the brave rangers out in the bush who risk their lives day after day to protect these amazing animals in the preserves. They are true heroes and any wildlife losses are clearly due to most ranger units being undermanned and illequipped to deal with these mini-militias that seem to roam the vast bush. I wish we could get some unmanned predator-type drone technology over these National Parks. That would end the poaching problem fast! In the future, perhaps the manufacture of these type of flying devices will become routine and civilian, and the technology can be leased from governments or corporations to aid in monitoring of large swathes of wilderness territories for the protection of the park animals. If they are used to locate and strike terrorists, they could be used to locate, deter, and possibly strike poachers out in the bush BEFORE the animals are reduced to parched carcasses rotting in the sun. It makes total sense to me, especially since some of the terrorist groups are using poached ivory to fund their atrocities against innocent people. I don’t know what the solution is, but I’m bound to throw out any idea I think of that could improve the situation and save the elephants, no matter how fanciful or farfetched that idea may appear. What are your thoughts on any or all of this? Anyone else want to weigh in on this?
Best Wishes, TheTeach

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