2 baby elephants just arrived. Both their mothers were killed by poachers
When poachers kill female elephants, defenseless young calves can be left behind. Nursing calves, still dependent on their mothers, cannot survive without intervention.
Learning to drink milk from a bottleLeft to fend for themselves, these orphans struggle without the milk they need to survive, or the opportunity to learn critical social skills from their mothers. The stress of losing a mother often weakens the calves’ immune systems, leaving them vulnerable to malnutrition, dehydration and other stress-related health problems.
Solution
Working with the GRI-Lusaka Elephant Nursery Project (LEN), a non-governmental organization based in Zambia, we helped develop and operate an elephant nursery.
https://www.ifaw.org/projects/lusaka-elephant-nursery-zambia
This is the first elephant orphanage in Southern Africa and the second on the continent. Its mission is to return rescued elephants back to the wild. Our teams take orphaned elephants out for regular walks, put them on feeding schedules and even watch over them while they sleep.
Foto: Daily walks
The project outgrew the capacity of the original nursery, so we built a new one. A production company, Sinking Ship Entertainment (SSE), asked us to join them in an innovative approach to launching their new TV show, Endlings. SSE included funds for elephant conservation in the show’s overall production costs and worked with us to cover the costs of building a new nursery.
The new nursery opened in August 2022 in Lusaka National Park. The park is spacious and offers a peaceful environment for the elephants to begin their journey back to the wild.
The nursery is a part of GRI’s larger Wildlife Discovery Centre, which operates in partnership with IFAW, David Shepherd Wildlife Foundation, Olsen Animal Trust and the Department of National Parks and Wildlife of Zambia.
School children at Wildlife Discovery Centre
Once the elephants are old enough to be weaned from milk, we transfer them to a special release facility in Kafue National Park.
With a thousand other wild elephants near the facility, we help the orphans integrate into a wild herd, gaining the herd’s protection and learning the social skills they will need to thrive.
As that happens, we use satellite collars to track their movements, ensure they integrate, and help them in case of emergency.
human connections.
The International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) is a global non-profit helping animals and people thrive together. We are experts and everyday people, working across seas, oceans, and in more than 40 countries around the world. We rescue, rehabilitate, and release animals, and we restore and protect their natural habitats. The problems we’re up against are urgent and complicated. To solve them, we match fresh thinking with bold action. We partner with local communities, governments, non-governmental organizations, and businesses. Together, we pioneer new and innovative ways to help all species flourish.
The problems we face are growing larger and more complex everyday. More online trafficking. More ocean noise. More powerful storms. We’ve been around for fifty years, but we know our solutions can’t stay the same. We have to be nimble, curious, and open to new partners. In short, we have to think, and act, differently.
When euthanasia seemed like the only option for stranded marine mammals, we found another way. We developed new technology to safely release them back into the ocean. When people in Bali were getting sick after natural disasters, we found the source: unvaccinated dogs. Now, we are making sure that island dogs get their rabies vaccines. And when we wanted to stop whale hunting in Japan, we called up the very last entity you could imagine: the Icelandic Tourism Board.
We’re not just finding a different way to do things. We’re finding a better way.