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FLORA AND FAUNA
Sri Lanka holds mass baby elephant christening
by Staff Writers
Colombo (AFP) June 10, 2012


Sri Lanka's main elephant orphanage staged its biggest mass christening Sunday by naming 15 baby elephants born in captivity, an official said.

Thirteen babies born last year and two in 2010 were given names chosen from among thousands suggested by visitors to the Pinnawala orphanage, director Nihal Senaratne said.

"An astrologer looked at the time of birth of each elephant. He then decided on the first letter of each baby's name according to its horoscope," Senaratne told AFP when contacted by telephone.

"The lucky letters were published and visitors were asked to suggest names accordingly," he said, adding that Sunday's ceremony was the biggest ever at the facility since it opened in 1975.

Foreign visitors to the orphanage named two of the babies Trinky and Elvina, while the others were given popular Sinhalese names including Mangala (meaning ceremonial), Singithi (small) and Ahinsa (innocent).

The orphanage, in a coconut grove about 80 kilometres (50 miles) east of Colombo, is a major tourist attraction and large crowds were present for Sunday's ceremony.

Babies are fed gallons of milk in public and the entire herd is taken across a main road to a nearby river at bathtime in a ritual that has become hugely popular with visitors.

Formally established in 1975, the orphanage shelters 83 elephants, most of whom were abandoned or separated from their herds when they were babies. Many have also been born at the orphanage.

Elephants are considered sacred animals and a number of the babies born at Pinnawala have been gifted to Buddhist temples to be paraded during annual pageants.

Sri Lanka's elephant population remains healthy despite decades of fighting between government and rebel forces in the island's north-east, the first survey since the end of the bloody civil war showed last year.

The survey showed the country had 7,379 elephants living in the wild, despite fears that the population had dwindled to an estimated 5,350. The country boasted 12,000 elephants in 1900.

The survey carried out in August last year counted 1,107 baby elephants in the wild, officials said.

The 15 babies were named: Singithi, Ahinsa, Themiya, Wanamali, Trinky, Elvina, Nandi, Mangala, Annuththara, Jeevaka, Kadol, Isira, Bimuthi, Aithi and Gagana.

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Namibia slams poaching claims in Mexico elephants export
Windhoek (AFP) June 8, 2012 - Namibia slammed reports Friday that it had exported nine orphaned elephants to Mexico, angrily denying the claims that sparked outrage in a nation proud of its conservation record.

Mexican businessman Frank Camacho said Tuesday his wildlife reserve had brought the young animals to Mexico after their parents were shot dead by hunters in Namibia.

Though Namibia did ship nine elephants, Namibian environmental minister Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah said reports they were orphans were untrue.

"There have been inaccurate local and international media reports labelling the nine elephants exported to Mexico as orphans as a result of hunting and poaching," she told journalists in the capital Windhoek.

"In no way can this export be considered as a 'rescue' mission, nor were these elephants orphans ... and not at risk of being destroyed by this ministry."

Camacho said his Africam Safari -- which maintains a nature reserve in central Mexico with some 300 species -- was contacted by the owner of a reserve in Namibia who said he did not have space to raise the animals.

But Nandi-Ndaitwahthe refuted this with official records.

"These elephants come from the (private game) farm Eden in northeastern Namibia and the founding stock of these animals were bought by the previous farm owner from South Africa's Kruger National Park and from Namibia's Etosha National Park in the 1980s," she said.

"There has never been any report of elephant poaching on Farm Eden."

The farm had sold the animals to an intermediary and transported to a temporary holding facility until their export was authorised last month, she said.

No poaching incidents have been reported in Namibia for several years. The exact number of its thousands of elephants is uncertain because the animals roam freely in nature reserves that cross into neighbouring countries Botswana, Angola, and Zambia.



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Ex-hunter thrills bird watchers on Ecuador preserve
Nanegalito, Ecuador (AFP) June 10, 2012
After hunting birds for decades, Angel Paz now guides bird-watchers who flock to his forested mountain preserve in Ecuador, home to one-sixth of the world's bird species. In 2005, the 47-year-old farmer traded in his rifle for binoculars after realizing that tourists would dole out large sums to view birds on the private preserve near Nanegalito, some 90 kilometers (56 miles) north of Quito. ... read more


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