At WRRC, we strongly believe in a rigorous academic and scientific approach to our rescue and rehabilitation work with urban wildlife.
We began our engagement with this captivity of elephants , over a decade ago, with our sister concern Compassion Unlimited Plus Action (CUPA). CUPA partnered with the Asian Nature Conservation Foundation (ANCF) to launch a pioneering initiative to research and document the status of India’s captive elephants.
This led to a cumulative publication comprising of 44 reports titled as ‘Captive Elephants In India – Ecology, Management & Welfare’ which documented almost 1200 captive elephants across 12 states of India, sponsored by World Society for Protection of Animals (WSPA), UK Reports
Following this, a workshop on Welfare Parameters and their Significance for Captive Elephants and their Mahouts in India was organized under the auspices of the Project Elephant Directorate, Ministry of Environment and Forests (MoEF),Govt. of India, to analyse the large set of data collected initially, parameters and their properties were identified, defined and ratings for each parameter and its property were assigned. Later, this entire process was critically reviewed by experts through the workshop.
The research papers presented here by Dr. Nirupama and Dr. Roopa Satish demonstrates commitment to veterinary medicine, with a particular focus on wildlife health and rehabilitation. Dr. Nirupama’s work is centered on the clinical management of diverse wild animal species, including case studies on orthopedic and neurological conditions in macaque and snake species, the treatment of injuries from human-wildlife conflict, and strategies for rehabilitating orphaned and rescued animals. Complementing this, Dr. Roopa’s research delves into broader areas of wildlife pathology, disease diagnosis, and conservation, highlighting parasitic infections in birds and mortality factors in wild species.She has co-authored several papers published in peer-reviewed journals, focusing on topics ranging from veterinary pathology to conservation and human-wildlife interactions.
Dr. Nirupama has presented and published abstracts on a wide range of topics related to veterinary science, with a particular focus on wildlife rehabilitation and clinical management of various animal species. Her work has been featured at several national and state-level conferences.
The research papers presented here by Dr. Nirupama and Dr. Roopa Satish demonstrates commitment to veterinary medicine, with a particular focus on wildlife health and rehabilitation. Dr. Nirupama’s work is centered on the clinical management of diverse wild animal species, including case studies on orthopedic and neurological conditions in macaque and snake species, the treatment of injuries from human-wildlife conflict, and strategies for rehabilitating orphaned and rescued animals. Complementing this, Dr. Roopa’s research delves into broader areas of wildlife pathology, disease diagnosis, and conservation, highlighting parasitic infections in birds and mortality factors in wild species.She has co-authored several papers published in peer-reviewed journals, focusing on topics ranging from veterinary pathology to conservation and human-wildlife interactions.
India has approximately 10% of its elephants in captivity spread across various management regimes, each of which vary significantly in their elephant-keeping practices. Despite a historical association and a close-working relationship with humans, captive Asian elephants have not been selectively bred for the purpose of domestication and therefore still retain their wild behavioral phenotypes and requirements. From studies on wild and captive animals we know that elephants are sentient, cognitive, and social beings. They respond to distress of other elephants, grieve at the loss of group members, excel in many cognitive tasks comparable to humans and great apes, have unique personalities and have strong social bonds based on individual preferences. This means that they have very specific and complex requirements which are challenging to fulfill in captive environments and often results in their physical and psychological welfare being compromised. While we may not be able to replicate the exact physical and social environments of wild elephants, we can focus on providing a ‘state’ of being, which is meaningful to individually rescued elephants. Previous elephant well-being studies across the country have predominantly focused on population-level parameters of welfare. However, for a cognitively and socially complex species such as the elephant, focusing on individual animal requirements is crucial if we are to adequately address their welfare and look at sustainable long-term interventions.
The Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation Centre (WRRC) has undertaken a research program to address these challenges. The elephants provide us with the opportunity of being able to create a welfare model focused on individual requirements.The program’s primary aim is to create higher-quality management strategies for captive elephants by focusing on individual care and intervention. This initiative is a pioneering effort to move beyond population-level welfare studies to a more individualized approach, recognizing the complex cognitive and social needs of these animals.
The project is structured in three distinct phases:
Phase I: Synthesis of Baseline Information
This phase focused on creating a detailed welfare requirement profile for each elephant at WRRC. The research considered each animal’s unique history, age, and personality, recognizing that their different lived experiences in various management regimes had to be accounted for when determining their individual needs.
Phase II: Providing Physical and Psychological Welfare Interventions
Based on the profiles from Phase I, the program provided tailored interventions to combat the negative effects of the elephants’ past. This included social, physiological, or cognitive support. For example, if an elephant displayed repetitive stereotypic behavior due to stress or boredom, the research team implemented cognitive enrichments to address and reduce these behaviors.
Phase III: Monitoring Interventions
The final phase involves monitoring the effects of the interventions by conducting “before and after” comparisons. This step is critical for understanding the impact of the interventions on each elephant’s welfare. The long-term goal is to use the findings from this project as a working model that can be adapted and applied to different captive elephant management systems across India, setting a new standard for ethical and effective elephant care.
This phase focused on creating a detailed welfare requirement profile for each elephant at WRRC. The research considered each animal’s unique history, age, and personality, recognizing that their different lived experiences in various management regimes had to be accounted for when determining their individual needs.
Based on the profiles from Phase I, the program provided tailored interventions to combat the negative effects of the elephants’ past. This included social, physiological, or cognitive support. For example, if an elephant displayed repetitive stereotypic behavior due to stress or boredom, the research team implemented cognitive enrichments to address and reduce these behaviors.
The final phase involves monitoring the effects of the interventions by conducting “before and after” comparisons. This step is critical for understanding the impact of the interventions on each elephant’s welfare. The long-term goal is to use the findings from this project as a working model that can be adapted and applied to different captive elephant management systems across India, setting a new standard for ethical and effective elephant care.
Gods in Chains, by Rhea Ghosh, is a non-fiction book that documents and exposes the harsh reality of India’s captive elephants.
We took this work forward also by collaborating with author Rhea Ghosh, to publish a seminal book highlighting the conditions of captive elephants, as they are currently used and kept in India. Initially started as an informal documentation, Gods in Chains later expanded to become a handbook of sorts , for anyone wanting to know more of the reality behind the veil of glamour and majesty of the captive pachyderm, especially in temple rituals and festival processions. The often troubled and complex relationship with their only companion, the mahout , is also a story of pathos and heartbreak for a deeply social and community-minded animal. WRRC was awarded the Proggy Award by People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) for this book and it was also the Social Cause Book of the Year, 2005.)