The Elephant Can Never Be Fully Domesticated
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The Elephant Can Never Be Fully Domesticated The basic truth about elephants is that they can never be fully domesticated. The domesticated elephants always nurse a tendency to return to the wild and never return. Thus, they are wild though they appear tamed by obeying certain commands, according to Jacob V. Cheeran, a retired veterinary Professor. A wrong notion is that a domesticated elephant would imperatively remain submissive and respond to the commands of the master as in the case of domestic animals such as the dog or the horse. Any breach by an elephant is regarded as an "unruly behavior that warrants suitable punishment''. The elephant is genetically designed to be naturally wild even after
domestication and expecting something contrary amounts to compelling
it to achieve the impossible. A domesticated elephant may appear to
be tame, but From the latter side, the most misconceived aspect is the musth' phenomenon. The popular conclusion is that an elephant in musth is a rogue one which has to be subdued. Such an attitude to an elephant in musth' is "cruelty at its height and a criminal ignorance of understanding its natural side.'' The musth' is a biological necessity in the bull elephant to ensure that the species is guaranteed from extinction. It is a stage when the level of the male sex hormones in a bull elephants blood is very high with the specific intention of establishing dominance over other bulls. The phenomenon is seasonal and it never takes place at the same time of the year for all the bulls. According to Dr. Cheeran and his contemporaries, K. Radhakrishnan and K. Chandrashekaran, musth' is unavoidable in a bull elephant, vis-a-vis, the mating urge. Every male animal in the wild, right from the docile deer to the aggressive grizzly bear, exhibit this tendency during the mating season to ensure that its genes get translated into another generation. The intention is to warn and ward off other male competitors for the female of the species in heat. For bull elephants, musth' ensures a good degree of muscle power to combat, chasing away other bull elephants in the area and establishing the right and chance to mate with a receptive female. "Musth is a physiological phenomenon must for all healthy male adult elephants". Wild bull elephants in musth' are seen to be less aggressive than
the domesticated ones, as since the former get the chance for mating.
Once the mating is over, the phenomenon subsides and it becomes normal.
The same bull In the wild, things are different. According to the editor of the
Kerala unit of the Journal of Indian Veterinary Association, T.P. Sethumadhavan,
the male-female sex ratio in the wild stands at 1:90 respectively.
Poaching In the
case of domesticated ones, it is again only natural that the tusker
targets its nearest contact, the mahout, "in an urge demanding
a mate''. The communication gap results in casualties. Dr. Cheeran
says " elephants have a According to S.S. Bist, director of Project Elephant, there is a tendency
to dismiss the domesticated elephants as another category of cattle
and this could be the reason why domesticated elephants have not received
due
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