Help Lucy the beautiful Elephant trapped in Edmonton Zoo!!
Lucy’s Edmonton Advocates’ Project
LEAP is a grassroots group of citizens with an informed interest in the welfare of elephants who actively campaign to help Lucy, the 43-year-old Asian elephant who has been held captive for 41 years at the Edmonton Valley Zoo. LEAP strives to educate the public and local politicians about the complex needs of elephants and how detrimental captivity can be for them not only affecting their quality of life but also their life expectancy. LEAP has embarked on a public awareness campaign to let citizens know how Lucy’s physical and behavioural needs are not being met at the Edmonton Valley Zoo and to correct misinformation about Lucy's options.
https://www.leapforlucy.com/?fbclid=IwAR3WlkBo47KpFZ6wS8vcGkH7bVYEEdkMsIg4WVYA9RgENHaAQlugQg-wWHQ
Put Lucy on the agenda!!
https://www.leapforlucy.com/put-lucy-on-the-agenda
About Lucy:
Here is the link to Lucy Files, the full details about this stunning lady.
https://bb308b14-b930-4f1c-8664-f287571d145d.filesusr.com/ugd/92de7f_fb7346d0662d47cb9b6599e6d34c6221.pdf
Please join LEAP for Lucy on Facebook to keep in touch with everything happening to this lovely gal. She NEEDS our help!
https://www.facebook.com/leapforlucy/
LEAP is a grassroots group of citizens with an informed interest in the welfare of elephants who actively campaign to help Lucy, the 43-year-old Asian elephant who has been held captive for 41 years at the Edmonton Valley Zoo. LEAP strives to educate the public and local politicians about the complex needs of elephants and how detrimental captivity can be for them not only affecting their quality of life but also their life expectancy. LEAP has embarked on a public awareness campaign to let citizens know how Lucy’s physical and behavioural needs are not being met at the Edmonton Valley Zoo and to correct misinformation about Lucy's options.
https://www.leapforlucy.com/?fbclid=IwAR3WlkBo47KpFZ6wS8vcGkH7bVYEEdkMsIg4WVYA9RgENHaAQlugQg-wWHQ
Put Lucy on the agenda!!
https://www.leapforlucy.com/put-lucy-on-the-agenda
About Lucy:
Lucy is a female Asian elephant, born in Sri Lanka in 1975. She came from
Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage/elephant breeding center. Lucy arrived at
Edmonton Valley Zoo (formerly known as Storyland Valley Zoo) at the age of 2.
She was alone at the zoo for her first 12 years in Edmonton.
In 1989, in lieu of Lucy having a calf,
Samantha, a 1 year old female African
elephant, captured in Zimbabwe, was
brought in for Lucy to mother. They are
different species – but small zoos at the
time liked to have one of each species,
even though their behaviour and temp-
elements are different and they would never meet in the wild.
In 2007, Lucy’s companion Samantha, after 18 years of bonding, was sent away on a long-term breeding loan and has never returned. Lucy has remained alone ever since. In any case, today’s zoo standards and the zoo’s own plan preclude adding another elephant. The exhibit is too small and improvement costs would be very high.
Lucy has suffered from many ailments, most brought about by zoo conditions. Respiratory and arthritis have been the most predominant (arthritis has never been recorded in wild elephants, only captive ones in zoos).
In 2010, Zoocheck, PETA and Edmonton resident
& President of the Voice For Animals Humane
The society named Tove Reece, all joined forces to file
a lawsuit on Lucy’s behalf. Although the case was
not won, it was appealed to Alberta’s Supreme
Court where 2 of the 3 justices decided against it.
The judge in support of the appeal, Chief Justice
Catherine Fraser wrote an insightful dissent which
could be a turning point in animal welfare law in
Canada. For the first time, a Canadian judge has
treated an animal like the individual that she is,
deserving of consideration, compassion, and
protection. It was then appealed to Canada’s Supreme Court which refused to hear it.
During the early portion of 2015, a new local advocacy group, Lucy’s Edmonton Advocates’ Project (LEAP) was being formed to focus their efforts solely on Lucy and to educate citizens and politicians in an informative and friendly manner.
In late 2016, Zoocheck and Voice for Animals launched new legal action against the Alberta Government for allowing the ongoing violations to the Alberta Zoo standards. The violations include keeping Lucy alone and not in an appropriate social grouping as outlined in the AB Zoo Standards. In addition, Lucy’s enclosure size and public safety issues resulting from the Valley Zoo’s free contact management — which allows Lucy to be in close contact with zoo visitors — were also included. As of this page being updated, a court date has still not been set.
FOR A MORE DETAILED LOOK AT LUCY'S STORY, PLEASE GO TO OUR DOCUMENTS SECTION AND CLICK ON "THE LUCY FILES"
The Asian or Asiatic elephant (Elephas maximus) is the only living
species of the genus Elephas and is distributed in Southeast Asia from
living land animals in Asia.
Since 1986, E. Maximus has been listed as endangered by the Inter-
National Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as the population has
declined by at least 50 percent over the last three generations. In 2003,
the wild population was estimated at between 41,410 and 52,345 individuals. Female captive elephants have lived beyond 60 years when kept
in semi-natural surroundings, such as forest camps. In zoos, elephants
die at a much younger age and are declining due to low birth and high
death rate. The pre-eminent threats to Asian elephants today are loss,
degradation and fragmentation of habitat, leading in turn to increasing
conflicts between humans and elephants. They are poached for ivory (although only the bulls produce tusks) and a variety of other products including meat and leather.
Demographic analysis of captive Asian elephants in North America indicates that the population is not self-sustaining. First-year mortality is nearly 30 percent, and fecundity is extremely low throughout the prime reproductive years. Data from North American and European regional studbooks from 1962 to 2006 were analyzed for deviation of the birth and juvenile death sex ratio. Of 349 captive calves born, 142 died prematurely. They died within one month of birth, major causes being stillbirth and infanticide by either the calf's mother or by one of the exhibition mates. The sex ratio of stillbirths in Europe was found to have a tendency for the excess of males.
Here is the link to Lucy Files, the full details about this stunning lady.
https://bb308b14-b930-4f1c-8664-f287571d145d.filesusr.com/ugd/92de7f_fb7346d0662d47cb9b6599e6d34c6221.pdf
Please join LEAP for Lucy on Facebook to keep in touch with everything happening to this lovely gal. She NEEDS our help!
https://www.facebook.com/leapforlucy/
Comments
Post a Comment