HE already weighs nearly three-quarters of a ton. But like any toddler, Aayu the elephant just wants to play. And that means big sister Nandita has to put up with the 1-year-old clambering all over her when he decides to. If that isn’t enough, another sister, Indali, who is a month older than Aayu, also likes to join in. The three are the youngest members of the Asian elephant herd at Chester Zoo in the U.K. and keep visitors entertained with their rolling in the dust, play fights and other antics. Nandita, who will be 3 in August, clearly revels in her role as big sister — and that often means keeping her excitable little brother in check. “Little Aayu wants to play fight all the time, which the girls don’t necessarily want to do,” said Andy McKenzie, the zoo’s elephant team manager. “So it can get a bit boisterous. He’s trying to push everybody all the time. He’s 700 kilograms, so he’s not tiny, even though he’s only a year old. But they don’t hurt each other, they are quite robust little things.” The siblings love nothing more than being together, with a particularly strong bond between Nandita and Aayu, he added. “They don’t want to be apart. Nandita leads them around and if they are not happy will take them back to their moms. She’s still a baby but she’s learning her role within the herd.” The eight elephants in their herd span four generations. The three babies share a father — 16-year-old Aung Bo, who weighs 4.5 tons — but have different mothers, which means there are three older females ready and waiting to keep the youngsters in line. The herd is part of a European breeding program for the threatened species — there are only around 40,000 Asian elephants left in the wild as a result of habitat loss, ivory poaching and other human activity. (SD-Agencies) |