African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript

Reviews the situation in Knysna since the author's earlier paper (Pachyderm no 21) focusing on elephant in coastal refuges which was written at a time when the Knynsa populations consisted of four aminals and a translocation from Kruger was pending. At present three females are present, no bon...

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Main Author: Joseph Dudley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IUCN 1996-12-01
Series:Pachyderm
Online Access:https://pachydermjournal.org/index.php/pachyderm/article/view/850
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author Joseph Dudley
author_facet Joseph Dudley
author_sort Joseph Dudley
collection DOAJ
description Reviews the situation in Knysna since the author's earlier paper (Pachyderm no 21) focusing on elephant in coastal refuges which was written at a time when the Knynsa populations consisted of four aminals and a translocation from Kruger was pending. At present three females are present, no bonding took place between the translocated juveniles and the resident elephants (one of the three translocated animals died in 1994). The author notes that the Knysna population may now be considered functionally extinct and he suggests that small, isolated elephant populations be given immediate attention if the continuity of the species is considered at all feasible in a specific area.
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spelling doaj-art-587f9476644e44bbb9093bc4ded2d5442025-08-20T03:48:22ZengIUCNPachyderm1026-28811683-50181996-12-0122110.69649/pachyderm.v22i1.850African elephants in coastal refuges: postscriptJoseph Dudley Reviews the situation in Knysna since the author's earlier paper (Pachyderm no 21) focusing on elephant in coastal refuges which was written at a time when the Knynsa populations consisted of four aminals and a translocation from Kruger was pending. At present three females are present, no bonding took place between the translocated juveniles and the resident elephants (one of the three translocated animals died in 1994). The author notes that the Knysna population may now be considered functionally extinct and he suggests that small, isolated elephant populations be given immediate attention if the continuity of the species is considered at all feasible in a specific area. https://pachydermjournal.org/index.php/pachyderm/article/view/850
spellingShingle Joseph Dudley
African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
Pachyderm
title African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
title_full African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
title_fullStr African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
title_full_unstemmed African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
title_short African elephants in coastal refuges: postscript
title_sort african elephants in coastal refuges postscript
url https://pachydermjournal.org/index.php/pachyderm/article/view/850
work_keys_str_mv AT josephdudley africanelephantsincoastalrefugespostscript