Elephant put down in KNP after attack

LazyLion

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An elephant bull has been put down after it attacked a couple in the Kruger National Park on Monday, trampling their blue Volkswagen car.

The attack took place at a water hole near Pretoriuskop in the south of the park, SA National Parks spokesman Ike Phaahla said on Tuesday, a Sapa correspondent reported.

"Apparently the South African couple were following the elephant bull to videotape it and suddenly the animal turned on them and pushed their car into the bush for about 400m. According to eyewitnesses the animal was extremely aggressive and our rangers were alerted of the incident by the tourists," Phaahla said.

A park physician advised the woman to go to the Medi-Clinic Hospital in Nelspruit for observation. The man was unharmed, but in shock.

Phaahla said the couple's names were being withheld until their families had been informed.

The elephant was put down because it had shown such aggressive behaviour before and posed a threat to other tourists.

"The elephant had to be put down. Since it was in its musth phase, the elephant had gotten into a fight with another dominant bull before and was very aggressive," Phaahla said.

During this phase an elephant's elevated testosterone levels cause them to become aggressive, even when unthreatened.

"Musth happens in the breeding season when young bachelor bulls try to enter a breeding herd to mate with a female," said nature conservationist Bryan Jones, of the Moholoholo Rehabilitation Centre.

"They are often driven away by the dominant male of that herd and may divert their frustration onto something else, sometimes humans."

Phaahla advised tourists to park at a safe distance from animals.

"We need to respect their space. They are wild animals and behave naturally in the wild. Their behaviour can be very unpredictable and if they feel under threat they will attack to defend themselves."

Apart from this incident Phaahla said the festive season had so far been uneventful in the park.

Some tourists had been caught getting out of their cars and several speeding fines had been issued.


Source : Sapa /str/th/jk/ar
Date : 31 Dec 2013 14:39

[video=youtube;ubV7n7dNkAk]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubV7n7dNkAk#t=112[/video]
 
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Not sure what happened here, but if you ask me people get too close to the animals.
 
Not sure what happened here, but if you ask me people get too close to the animals.

Of all the animals out there, an elephant is the one I'm most scared of - they are more unpredictable than humans...
 
I've had a elephant ambush me. BIG male.

He was walking on a dirt road and didn't want to get off it, (between Shingwedzi and Letaba) I had reversed about 2km for him already. Eventually he goes off the road into bushes, there was about 100m grass clearing between the road and the bushes. As I pass the spot he storms out at full charge, luckily I was ready and accelerated away in a cloud of dust.
 
Elephants are unfortunately just ***holes sometimes, and 6 ton ***holes are not fun to deal with. We've encountered elephants quite clearly simply out to stir, and they very quickly go from busting down trees to charging down vehicles, regardless the space one gives them. Luckily we've always managed to get away unscathed, but only because we are always wary and ready to react around them.
 
This is BS...why does the animal always have to be put down?
I am all for putting down the idiot humans too.......better to have one troublesome animal removed than have several people/property injured or worse, because the park did nothing....

You moan about that, what about the yearly culling of animals, not just on KNP, every other private game farm or nature conserve, seriously come on you not waving your hands in the air for that.

Besides elephants are extremely smart, done it once in all likely event do it again and again, it's literally a catch 22.
 
I am all for putting down the idiot humans too.......better to have one troublesome animal removed than have several people/property injured or worse, because the park did nothing....

You moan about that, what about the yearly culling of animals, not just on KNP, every other private game farm or nature conserve, seriously come on you not waving your hands in the air for that.

Besides elephants are extremely smart, done it once in all likely event do it again and again, it's literally a catch 22.

I complain about every animal put down for stupid reasons.
 
I've had a elephant ambush me. BIG male.

He was walking on a dirt road and didn't want to get off it, (between Shingwedzi and Letaba) I had reversed about 2km for him already. Eventually he goes off the road into bushes, there was about 100m grass clearing between the road and the bushes. As I pass the spot he storms out at full charge, luckily I was ready and accelerated away in a cloud of dust.
:D:D
 
I've had a elephant ambush me. BIG male.

He was walking on a dirt road and didn't want to get off it, (between Shingwedzi and Letaba) I had reversed about 2km for him already. Eventually he goes off the road into bushes, there was about 100m grass clearing between the road and the bushes. As I pass the spot he storms out at full charge, luckily I was ready and accelerated away in a cloud of dust.

****, the run-ins we've also had. I forget which car - I think it might've been a Nissan Maxima - but I remember an elephant being the reason my dad learnt not only that his new car's newfangled electronic speedo worked in reverse, but also that said car would clock an indicated 55km/h going backwards. On a fortuitously straight dirt road.
 
I complain about every animal put down for stupid reasons.
Then you have no idea what overpopulation can do to a park....you can have so many animals in a enclosed space, a space that can only accommodate so many animals the end, culling it's the cheapest and easiest method, and far out weighs the cost of tracking animals to be culled, catching them and transporting them to wildlife auctions.....

Hardly stupid reason culling is a necessary evil...
 
Then you have no idea what overpopulation can do to a park....you can have so many animals in a enclosed space, a space that can only accommodate so many animals the end, culling it's the cheapest and easiest method, and far out weighs the cost of tracking animals to be culled, catching them and transporting them to wildlife auctions.....

Hardly stupid reason culling is a necessary evil...

Erm, Kruger doesn't cull elephants. Hasn't for near 20 years.
 
So much for the reading skills :( Go forth and read again and point out where I said "culling elephants" kindly ;)Have a hard time figuring out how you deduced "animals" to a singular animal specie ?

Says the genius who thinks 'specie' is the singular of 'species'. But fine... no animals are routinely culled in the Kruger. Happy? :rolleyes:

And therein lies the problem...

I don't think so, no. A given area of land will only support a given population of animal; the numbers will tend to regulate themselves, and have done for decades. There is rather an argument that culling in the past actually gave rise to even more destructive behaviour because it left entire herds of 6-ton ***holes traumatised and decidedly not people-friendly.

What was a bigger issue - something I know the park has been looking at actively over the last few years - was the over-abundant artificial water supply in Kruger, leading to higher animal numbers than the bush could comfortably support. This is why no additional watering holes have been established recently, and why a number of dams have been destroyed.
 
This is BS...why does the animal always have to be put down?

As an example to the other animals. Well, provided they hang the elephants publicly. Otherwise it's just retribution.
 
Genius, nope mostly definitely not, do I care about petty sarcasm and asstitudes, I couldn't give a flying pig's ass.....
Clearly...


Specifically related to elephants, you say? I thought we weren't talking about only a singular 'specie'. :rolleyes:

And read up what? Some boob's self-confessed and widely contested pro-culling 'opinion', as per the 2nd sentence of your link? No thanks; I'm well enough familiar with pro- and anti-culling arguments.
 
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