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Sunday, June 30, 2013

Back to Latin!



The Elephantidae.  I think one of the most amazing creatures on this earth.  Here are the names of the domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus and speces of the African Elephant! 

Domain: Eukarya
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Proboscidae
Family: Elephantidae
Genus: Loxodonta
Species: Loxondanta africana




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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Elephant vs. Football Player Eating Contest!

I've heard of eating contests that were human vs. human, but I've never heard of a human vs. elephant eating contest! 



"It was a defeat the members of the Southwestern College Jaguars football team may find tough to stomach. But try as they might, the players just couldn't eat more watermelons than the two Asian elephants they were battling.

Sure, football players are known for their immense appetites, but their bulging waistlines were no match for two voracious eaters named Becky and Rosie who out ate the athletes from the San Diego-area college on Friday.

The eight Jags gorged themselves heartily, and managed to eat eight watermelons in a 15-minute battle. But they were no match for the pachyderms who each consumed five for a grand total of 10 at the San Diego County fair.

Becky and Rosie could have eaten even more melons, but their trainers decided to truncate the amount of fruit they were given so they'd have more to eat on the weekend.

The jumbo competition was part of an effort to raise $5,000 for the International Elephant Foundationan organization that currently has 70 projects around the world designed to save the species from extinction.

~David Moye
Huffington Post
June 29, 2013



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Friday, June 28, 2013

Letter to the President

June 28, 2013

Dear President Obama,

Hello, my name is Ella Warburg. I am an ingoing 8th grade student at Valley Christian in Dublin, California, just outside of San Francisco.  I know you are very busy, and I would like to thank you for all that you’ve done for our country in the past five years.  I am writing to you regarding the terrible elephant poaching problems that are occurring worldwide.   

On Thursday, November 8th, 2012, Former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton made her address at the State Department, concerning Wildlife Trafficking and Conservation.  The day before this speech, I started a blog on this subject called “E is for Elephants” (eis4elephants.blogspot.com).

As I am only 13 years old, this is my first time blogging.  However, after reading the sickening news reports and magazine articles, I knew I had to act. 

I would love to assist you in bringing awareness to this crisis and help combat the illegal trade of wildlife (and the unfortunate crime that follows) while promoting conservation.  How can I be of help?

Thank you so much,

Ella Caledonia Warburg



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Thursday, June 27, 2013

Etsy's Elephants

Etsy is an online marketplace where you can buy super cute handmade and unusual items from around the world. They have some adorable elephant accessories... here are a few of my favorites!

www.etsy.com


Precious nursery pillow by Erin!


A darling ring by Jane!



My absolute favorite; an elephant dress by Jennifer Taylor!

A handy iPhone case by GraphicFusion!

Awesome elephant bracelet by Camel Lee!


Super cute elephant bow by Bowlicious Divas Bowtique!



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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Ancient Elephants Grazed Before They Had Teeth


A new study indicates that as ancestors of modern elephants, such as these African elephants at Mole National Park in Ghana, evolved, anatomical changes significantly lagged behind habitat and behavioral adaptations. 

Ancient elephants switched from eating primarily leaves and shrubs to feeding on grass several million years before their teeth were fully adapted for grazing, according to a new study.

The findings indicate that as the ancestors to modern elephants evolved, anatomical changes significantly lagged behind habitat and behavioral adaptations, said Adrian Lister, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum in London, England.

"It only makes sense that behavior is a powerful driver of evolution, and that by taking the behavioral step to eat grass, it imposes the selection pressure for the right kind of teeth," Lister told LiveScience. "The idea has been around for around 100 years, but there have been few demonstrated examples. This is the first example from the fossil record."

About 10 million years ago, during a time period known as the Miocene epoch, the east African climate became dryer and cooler, prompting the gradual spread of grasslands over areas that were once heavily forested. [In Photos: Mammals Through Time]

"What we find with a lot of mammal groups is that some species switched their diets," Lister said. "During this time, the earliest true elephants went from what we describe as 'browsers,' which eat mostly leaves from trees and shrubs, to what we call 'grazers,' which mostly eat grass."

Lister used data that looked for specific chemical signatures in the fossilized teeth of ancient elephants in east Africa. As animals' teeth grow and form, chemical traces of food and water become locked into the enamel, which enable paleontologists to determine the diets of extinct animals.

By studying these fossilized teeth, Lister noticed that the change in feeding behavior occurred about 7 million years ago, which is about 3 million years before corresponding anatomical changes — evident in the structure and shape of the teeth — can be found in the fossil record.

Since grass is tougher to eat than leafy greens, grazing animals tend to have higher-crowned teeth with more enamel ridges, Lister said. This is because grazers tend to pick up more grit from the soil, which can wear teeth down.

"We don't see this change in crown height until about 4 million years ago, so there's a lag of several million years," Lister said. "Even with the wrong teeth for it, by starting to eat grass as food, these animals were imposing a lot of selective pressure. But, it required the behavioral change first."

While Lister is still unsure why the gap between the behavioral and anatomical changes is so great, he hopes future studies will be able to unearth more clues.
"The reason for the lag is not completely and satisfactorily explained," Lister said. "What I was hoping to do with this paper is show the kind of data that we can put together to answer these types of questions. We can see whether behaviors drive the evolutionary process, which, in my opinion, has been sidelined in evolutionary biology. Now, because we have the means to look at it directly in the fossil record, we can try looking for it."

~Denise Chow
June 26, 2013
NBC News Science



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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

iWorry. Do you?

iWorry is elephant-protecting campaign through The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust.  You can go to their website here.  



Over the past 34 years the African Elephant population has declined to heartbreakingly low figures, primarily due to the ivory trade. There are said to be around 470,000 African Elephants left in the wild, a painfully sharp contrast to the 1,300,000 which roamed the wilderness in 1979.
In 1989, a worldwide ban on ivory trade was approved by CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species). Levels of poaching fell dramatically, and black market prices of ivory slumped, it seemed CITES had saved the African Elephant…
However, in 1997 CITES down-listed the elephant species into a ‘less endangered’ status due to the decrease in ivory demand. Just a year later a Taiwanese port seized tusks and ivory totalling a weight of 1.45 tonnes. In 2002, it was agreed that Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe could export 60 tonnes of ivory, subject to condition, which resulted in 108 tonnes to Japan and China, this finally took place in 2008.
Many predicted the sale might fuel an increasing appetite for ivory among the growing Chinese middle class and as poaching rates are now the highest they’ve been since 1989; this prediction was sadly very accurate. It was official; the levels of poaching and illegal trade had rocketed once again and were spiraling out of control.
The links between the ivory trade and the illegal killing of elephants are clear to see and unless action is taken based on informative evidence, African Elephants will be gone within our lifetimes.

iWorry is a campaign by The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust (DSWT).
The DSWT is a front-line organisation working every day in the field to protect Africa’s wildlife and habitats. We are not traditionally a campaigning organisation, but the severity of the danger caused by the escalating ivory trade will only be countered if we all stand up for elephants together.
At the DSWT we love elephants and we can’t imagine a world without them, but if we don’t all come together to stand up for elephants and add our voice to those fighting against the ivory trade, the African Elephant species could be lost forever.
As long as there is a market for ivory, elephants will be cruelly killed for their tusks. We want everyone who loves elephants to Say NO to ivory and stand up for elephants.
The DSWT iWorry campaign aims to raise awareness of the urgent need to stop all trade in ivory internationally, in order to protect the future of elephants.

~iWorry Website



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Monday, June 24, 2013

The Elephant Corridors

Our prayers for one of the most influential, amazing leaders in the world, Nelson Mandela.  He helped establish elephant corridors in his homeland.  He has been a man of fortitude and peace who has loved the people and wildlife of South Africa his whole life.

Southern Africa is home to some of the highest concentrations of elephants in the world. So high, in fact, that human-elephant conflict and elephant-caused habitat destruction have prompted officials to consider culling, or thinning, the elephant populations in some areas. The problem is not exactly the high number of elephants living in southern Africa, but rather the limited amount of habitat available for them to live in.
Human settlements, civil unrest, veterinary and game fences, and political boundaries restrict the elephants’ natural ability to disperse. This quite regularly results in sometimes fatal (for both man and animal) conflict with humans when elephants raid crops and enter towns and villages. Additionally, there is a delicate balance between the ecosystem and the number of elephants it can support. When elephant numbers exceed that threshold, the balance is disrupted and the habitat begins to be destroyed by normal elephant behavior. In South Africa, the destruction of the habitat has lead to desertification and the drastic reduction of vegetation and the organisms that depend on it.
One of the easiest solutions to these problems involves establishing ‘elephant corridors’ that allow the pachyderms to disperse between protected areas and across national borders. The first of its kind, the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area (KAZA TFCA) is an idea becoming reality that was developed by the neighboring governments of Botswana, Angola, Namibia, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. KAZA TFCA will serve as a trans-national “superpark” that encompasses an area of 300,000 km² — the largest wildlife park in the world. In order for the idea to work, elephants must have a way to disperse across these countries and elephant corridors will facilitate just that.
According to a recent update on Sir Richard Branson’s blog, former President of South Africa Nelson Mandela and his organization, the Peace Parks Foundation, have teamed with Branson, Mike Humphries, and Virgin Unite to actualize one of Mandela’s long-standing dreams. Together they are campaigning to establish an elephant corridor that will link Botswana’s Chobe National Park, through Namibia’s Kasika and Impalila Conservancies, to Kafue National Park in Zambia. They are working with Pifworld to raise the funds needed to set up 36 kilometers of game fencing , which will effectively create and delineate a pathway for elephant populations to disperse between these nations. Small elephant populations will be relocated to the corridor area to facilitate the dispersal process and help southern Africa’s elephant populations even out across the landscape without interference from expanding human settlements.
Soon to be 92 years old, Nelson Mandela has dreamed of African wilderness being unified across many countries in peace. He once told National Geographic journalist, Peter Godwin: “I dream of an Africa which is in peace with itself…I dream of the realization of the unity of Africa, whereby its leaders combine in their efforts to solve the problems of this continent. I dream of our vast deserts, of our forests, of all our great wildernesses. We must never forget that it is our duty to protect this environment. Transfrontier parks are a way we can do just that.”
By establishing elephant corridors, Mandela’s dreams can now become a reality and one that can change the way the world views wilderness and wildlife. His goals as an inspirational involvement in the Peace Parks Foundation can and will soon be reached when elephants are able to begin using their habitat in a way that is natural to them.
~GAFA Wildlife
June 30, 2010

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Sunday, June 23, 2013

Elephart (Elephant art)

Check out these awesome pieces of art from deviantART!



Drawing by "bananacosmicgirl"

Drawing by "bluewhale13"

Sketch by "lizard531"

Drawing/painting by "benizalilg"

Painting by "Emski"




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Saturday, June 22, 2013

Home, Home On The Range

This article reminds me of a old song that I love, Home on the Range.  I thought of this song mainly because of the second part of the chorus. Elephants roam where they were meant to roam, and the "deer and the antelope" (all of the other animals) are happy where they are. 
Home, home on the range
Where the deer and the antelope play
Where seldom is heard a discouraging word
And the skies are not cloudy all day  
Also, going back to elephant behaviors, it is scientifically proven that elephants will act in a "rogue" manner only if they are traumatized. 
Elephants (or their ancestors the Mammoth) have been around much longer than we humans have.  Don't you think that they've already marked their territory?

Elephants aren't encroaching on us; we're encroaching on them!

A male elephant is lowered onto a truck by the Kenyan Wildlife Service after being sedated on the edge of the Ol Pejeta conservancy in central Kenya on June 21, 2013. Nine 'rogue' elephants that have been destroying crops in the area will be translocated from the conservancy to the larger Kora National Reserve in order to ease the human-wildlife conflict over land. (PHIL MOORE/AFP/Getty Images)

"Wildlife officials are in the process of translocating 15 "rogue" elephants between protected breeding grounds in Kenya this week.
The animals are being moved from the Ol Pejeta Conservancy to Meru National Park after "terrorizing residents," damaging crops and destroying fences in the area, according to a report from The Star, a Kenyan newspaper. An official with the park said the relocation process is normal and carried out whenever populations surge to help control human-wildlife conflicts.
Unfortunately, elephants and their tusks are still prime targets for poachers, and more than 40,000 are killed every year, according to the Elephant Advocacy League. Fences and national park designations do little to deter heavily armed raiders looking to profit off ivory that can sell for more than $1,300 a pound overseas. "
~Huff Post GREEN
June 22, 2013


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Friday, June 21, 2013

Spying on the Elephants

It's eavesdropping  on the elephants!  And saving them too, of course!




Modern technology can give scientists a better picture of 
what’s actually happening deep in the rain forest.

Elephants are probably not the first animal you think of when picturing the rainforest--they’re generally seen roaming the savannahs of Africa, like the one in the picture here, or traipsing across the grasslands of Southeast Asia. But there is a subset of elephants that live in the rainforests of Central Africa, and they’re in trouble. At least 1 million of these animals lived in the rainforest at one time; today, there are just 100,000.

The Elephant Listening Project, an initiative that records elephant vocal exchanges in an attempt to figure out what they’re doing, is engaged in the tricky work of eavesdropping on these animals without encroaching upon their remote habitats.
Peter Wrege, director of the Elephant Listening Project--a project of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology--explains part of the problem in a post on the O’Reilly website:
Forest elephants spend most of their lives walking a network of paths through the forest, finding food and perhaps engaging in social interactions about which we know nothing. ELP is trying to pair video camera traps with acoustic recording units to piece together what is happening--but a network of acoustic and video sensors produces a lot of data and we don’t have an efficient way to get it out of the forest.
Cell phone towers can help in some instances, but getting data from the recorders in the forest to the cell towers--and then to Cornell’s computers--isn’t easy. Another problem: marking elephants from a safe distance. Tranquilizing them and adding tracking collars isn’t an option; the mortality rate is too high. When the elephants come to a clearing, the ELP can use thermal imaging. But this isn’t a permanent solution. Wrege writes:
Never before have we been able to see so clearly what before we could mostly only hear –-and now it’s possible to put together the sounds with the relevant behavioral interactions. But the characteristics we use to identify individuals during the day (rips in the ear, shape of tail hairs) aren’t visible with the thermal imaging.
Wrege also suggests that crowdsourcing of elephant sounds by nearby residents could also be useful, but the locals would first need to understand the sounds that they’re hearing--perhaps with help from a cell phone app.
None of this will directly keep the elephants from being killed, but the hope is that understanding these elephant noises (and any nearby gunshots) will help officials to track down poachers. Whether that happens efficiently enough to save the elephants will depend on how quickly the ELP can find solutions to its technological quandaries.

~Ariel Schwartz
Co.EXIST
June 21, 2013

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Thursday, June 20, 2013

Elephant Killings Surge as Tusks Fund Terror

Hello, friends!

I am home, and missed everyone, and really missed reporting on elephants every day!  I found this interesting article from CNN, by Mark Quarterman, from today.  As I've reported before, multiple armed groups continue to use elephants to fund their bad behavior.  

"An elephant walks with her infant in the Amboseli Game Reserve in Kenya. The International Fund for Animal Welfare says 2012 had the highest toll of elephants' lives in decades. Between January and March 2012, at least 50% of the elephants in Cameroon's Bouba Ndjida National Park were slaughtered for their ivory. Most illegal ivory is destined for Asia, in particular China, where it has soared in value as an investment and is coveted as "white gold."
~CNN


(CNN) -- The accelerating pace of the slaughter of elephants for their tusks has put African elephants at catastrophic risk in the coming decades. To make matters worse, some of the region's most notorious armed groups are taking tusks to finance their atrocities.
The Somali terrorists of al-Shabaab, the Sudanese government-supported janjaweed militia that has been responsible for much of the violence during the Darfur genocide, and the Lord's Resistance Army, which has kidnapped hundreds of boys and girls across central Africa to be fighters and sex slaves, are participating in this illegal trade.
These groups typically kill elephants using the automatic weapons that they also use to kill people. And as the militants become more involved in the poaching business, they apply the same lack of discrimination in killing elephants that they have demonstrated with their human victims. For example, poachers thought to be janjaweed from Sudan, working with Chadians, allegedly killed at least 86 elephants, including calves and 33 pregnant females, over the course of a week.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare found that at least 400 elephants were slaughtered between January and March 2012 at the Bouba Ndjida National Park in Cameroon. Animal rights groups say poaching is worse than it's been in decades. They say it may be even worse than it was in the 1980s, before the international ban on ivory was put in place.
Typically, the elephants are killed only for their tusks. Poachers often hack off their trunks first and then their tusks with hacksaws and machetes, and leave the bodies to rot. Some Lord's Resistance Army groups have reportedly eaten the meat of some of the elephants they have killed, which is not surprising given their frequent hand-to-mouth existence in the bush.
This appalling reality presents an opportunity for conservation groups and anti-atrocity and human rights groups to join forces to combat the threat posed to people and elephants by these armed groups.
Achim Steiner, U.N. undersecretary general and the U.N. Environment Program's executive director, said, "The surge in the killing of elephants in Africa and the illegal taking of other listed species globally threatens not only wildlife populations but the livelihoods of millions who depend on tourism for a living and the lives of those wardens and wildlife staff who are attempting to stem the illegal tide."
According to a report released in March 2013 by UNEP,17,000 elephants in monitored reserves were killed in 2011. The toll climbed in 2012. The number of elephants killed for their tusks has exploded in recent years because of high prices from rising global demand for ivory, particularly in China and Thailand. The pace of killing outstrips wild elephants' natural reproductive replacement rate.
Armed groups take advantage of the increasing value of ivory to fund their atrocities. Their fighters have the training and weapons to kill large numbers of elephants and trade their tusks for arms, ammunition and food. The Enough Project and the Satellite Sentinel Project recently released a report focused on the LRA's poaching of elephant tusks in the Democratic Republic of Congo's Garamba National Park. The LRA, whose leader Joseph Kony is the subject of an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity, has for decades terrorized the people of central Africa. Other groups, such as al-Shabaab and the janjaweed, seem to have made similar calculations.
Ivory poaching for profit by armed groups is not new. In the 1970s, according to University of London researcher Keith Sommerville, the South African military partly funded its support of white Rhodesian forces fighting African rebel groups through revenue from the killing of elephants in Rhodesia, which was then legal. Rebels in Angola and Mozambique, also supported by South Africa, took tusks and sold them through South Africa.
Both poaching and armed groups such as the LRA arise from a vacuum of governance. Indeed, The New York Times correspondent Jeffrey Gettleman and others say that members of the armed forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda have participated in the illegal ivory trade as well.
Only effective local, national, and transnational action can stop this horror. Anti-atrocity groups such as the Enough Project can advocate for actions to shut off the demand for ivory in Asia. Conservation groups could broaden their focus to include efforts to end wars that have created a symbiotic relationship between ivory poaching and civilian suffering. Both types of organizations should emphasize the longer-term requirement for effective governance to lessen the likelihood of war and ivory poaching.
Joint and parallel action could tap activist organizations, increase the pressure on policymakers for action and broaden the knowledge about both of these problems among those who previously had focused on only one.
The combined efforts of conservation and human rights groups could spur the efforts of governments and international organizations to slow the destruction of the African elephant and free the people of east and central Africa from the threat of Joseph Kony and his ilk. This could be the start of a beautiful friendship, one that could help stop the massacre of both humans and animals in Africa.

~Mark Quarterman
CNN
June 20, 2013


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Monday, June 10, 2013

Letter to the Readers!

Dear eis4elephants Readers,

Thank you for your continuous support of my blog.  The elephants thank you too!  I am very excited to announce that I am going on a river rafting trip on the San Juan River in Utah!  I am leaving tomorrow, and my next post will be on Thursday the 20th!  Happy early summer season!   Every day while I'm away, be sure to make a difference!



"Don't wait for others to make a difference.  You go do it yourself, and trust that others will follow."

~Me



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