Sunday, August 28, 2005
Yahoo! News
LAMPANG, Thailand - A Thai elephant that attracted worldwide attention
when its foot was amputated after it stepped on a land mine has
been fitted with a temporary prosthesis, a wildlife conservation
worker said Sunday.
The 44-year-old female elephant, Motola, is expected to wear the
lightweight, canvas shoe-like device for five to eight months until
her leg is strong enough to carry a heavier, permanent one, said
Soraida Salwala, founder of the Friends of the Asian Elephant hospital
in northern Thailand.
Motola was injured in 1999 while working at a logging camp near
the border with neighboring Myanmar, a region peppered with landmines
after a half-century of insurgency. Her mangled, left front foot
was subsequently amputated, and she has hobbled on three feet since.
Veterinarians have been attaching the sawdust-filled prosthesis
to Motola daily since Aug. 10 as a therapeutic measure to help prepare
her for a permanent prosthesis made from fiberglass and silicone,
she said.
"We have to mold her leg," Soraida said. "If it
doesn't fit, then it doesn't stay."
In the meantime, the current prosthesis may be replaced by a heavier
one, perhaps filled with sand, to further exercise and strengthen
the elephant's leg muscles and tendons before veterinarians attempt
to attach the permanent one, she added.
The number of working elephants in Thailand has declined from about
10,000 in the 1970s to about 2,000.