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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Caroline Abbott

Paignton Zoo will no longer be home to elephants after beloved animals die

A UK zoo will no longer keep elephants after admitting it can't provide the "necessary environment" for them.

Paignton Zoo in Devon used to have two elephants – Asian elephant Gay, who died in 2010, and African elephant Duchess, who died in 2019.

The attraction, which is celebrating its 100th birthday, has confirmed they will not be replaced, Devon Live reports.

It said: “Elephants are highly intelligent and have very complex social and behavioural needs.

“As much as we loved Duchess (and her companion, Gay) and as popular as she was with our visitors, we do not believe that we can provide the necessary environment for elephants here at Paignton.”

The zoo added that it continues to support elephant conservation in the wild.

The zoo said it cannot provide the 'necessary environment' for elephants (SWNS.com)

A statement said: “We have been working to protect the Omo Forest Reserve in Nigeria since 1997 and this is one of the last remaining places in Nigeria where forest elephants still survive.

“Visitors are therefore still helping protect elephants when they visit our zoo, even though we no longer have any here.”

Last year – when there were 51 elephants in 11 zoos across the UK – it was reported that keeping elephants in zoos or safari parks would be phased out.

Importation of new elephants would be prohibited and the existing population would be allowed to die out naturally.

The news delighted campaigners who said that elephants, which are highly intelligent animals, suffer from mental illness in zoos.

The RSPCA said it also causes them physical ailments such as crippling arthritis.

They only live for an average of 17 years in captivity, compared with more than 50 years in the wild, where they live in large herds with highly complex social lives, and some travel hundreds of miles each year.

It has been illegal for circuses to keep elephants since January 2020.

This legislation would bring an end to more than seven centuries of elephants being kept in captivity in this country.

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