Watching An Elephant Die
Category: Other news | Date: Jan 11 2009 | By: ewasolions
A few days ago, I was in camp mid-morning when I received a radio message from the community scouts informing me that an elephant was dying and had lay down. Two days prior to this I had seen a young female elephant looking very thin in the Conservation Area of West Gate Conservancy. Her 2.5 year old calf was with her at the time and was happily feeding whilst her mother stood in the sun without moving, looking very thin and unwell.
Sick female elephant a few days before dying
I couldn’t help but think that maybe this was that very same young female who was dying. I had alerted Save the Elephants a few days before that and their researchers came out to look for the female. The female was not found then and the urgent radio message about the dying elephant was received the following day.
I rushed out of camp and headed towards the end of the Conservation Area. After communicating with the community scouts about the elephant’s location and the scouts whereabouts, we drove into the dry river bed of the Ewaso Nyiro River. I left Gypsy here and we proceeded on foot and crossed the river.
The female was laying down about 30 metres away from the river bank. Her calf stood by her, wandering into the bushes at times to feed. This was indeed the very same female I had seen a few days ago.
We sat with the elephant for sometime waiting for the security personnel and Save the Elephants researchers to arrive. The scene attracted many Samburu warriors who were herding their livestock and bathing in the river. They were curious to know what had happened to this poor elephant and also worried about what would happen to her calf.
Warriors watch the elephant
The young female didn’t move much but we knew she was alive because each time many flies irritated her eyes, she would blink slowly to remove them. She was very thin and her face was sunken in. It was unclear as to what had affected this elephant to make her so sick before she lay down to die.
The sick female
By 4 pm, the scouts and researchers arrived. They decided to wait a while to see if the female would eventually stand up. She could not be approached too close because of her young calf and we did not want to scare the calf away.
Calf stays with dying mother
I left after 6 hours of watching this poor female. The community scouts stayed with her during the entire night. I arrived back at the scene at 6 am and the scouts informed me that the elephant had died during the night. We could hear the calf somewhere in the bushes nearby but I didn’t see her.
During the day, the rangers and security personnel arrived to remove her tusks. I returned in the evening but still had no sighting of the calf. I visited the carcass again the following morning and found hyena tracks all around her but strangely, the hyenas did not touch her. I will be heading back there later today and will keep you posted.
It was unclear as to what killed this elephant. No obvious wounds were seen and she most likely died of an illness. Her calf has not been seen since then. It is my hope that she joined other elephants who were in the vicinity of the area.
Tags: calf, Community, Douglas-Hamilton, elephants, Ewaso Nyiro, hyenas, Samburu, Save the Elephants







7 Responses to “Watching An Elephant Die”
Paul, on 15 Jan 2009
Hi Shivani. What will rangers/KWS do with the tusks?
ewasolions, on 15 Jan 2009
Hi Paul
Thanks for your comment. Basically, the rangers remove all tusks from dead elephants and put it in storage. In this case, all tusks removed are taken to the storage facility at the KWS base not far from here.
Shivani
Paul, on 15 Jan 2009
And then what? It just sits there forever or does the Kenyan government sell it like the recent auction in RSA and Botswana?
ewasolions, on 15 Jan 2009
Hi Paul
Yes all stockpiles of ivory are held in storage facilities in the country. President Moi in 1989 burned many tons of ivory in Nairobi National Park as a symbol to the rest of the world that Kenya was (and is) against the ivory trade. It may have happened once more after that.
Shivani
Paul, on 15 Jan 2009
How do they remove the tusks from the dead elephant? Chainsaws? Or is it a more delicate procedure?
ewasolions, on 16 Jan 2009
Hi Paul -its not a very delicate procedure - basically, the trunk is cut off first and then the tusks are hacked out. No chainsaws are used to my knowledge.
Shivani
Ewaso Lions » Big Bull Elephant Dies Mysteriously, on 12 Mar 2009
[…] date, we do not know what happened to him. There were no visible wounds on him. This is now the second elephant to have died in the area for unknown […]
Trackback URI | Comments RSS
Leave a Reply