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News / Nation & World

Zoo told to stop using dogs with elephants

The Columbian
Published: February 2, 2015, 4:00pm

PITTSBURGH — The federal government has ordered the Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium to have its human handlers stop using cattle dogs to cause “behavioral stress” to its elephants.

The inspection report by the U.S. Department of Agriculture was released Monday by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. PETA complained about the practice late last year and trumpeted the USDA decision.

“When elephants, dogs, and human handlers freely mix, everyone is in danger,” Delcianna Winders, a lawyer for PETA, said in a statement. “PETA is calling on the Pittsburgh Zoo to switch to safe and modern elephant-management method — or, better yet, to retire the elephants to an accredited sanctuary where they’ll be free from harassment for the rest of their lives.”

According to the Jan. 7 inspection report, the zoo was ordered to immediately stop using the dogs in ways that upset the elephants.

Barbara Baker, the zoo’s president and CEO, issued a statement saying: “The dogs read the behavior of the animals and alert the keepers to any disruption in the herd, preventing potential safety concerns for the staff and elephants. This method of animal management, in the livestock field, is referred to as a low-stress method.”

Officials with the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service visited the zoo on Jan. 6 and asked an unnamed manager to demonstrate how the dogs are used, according to the report.

The manager called one dog “to create a barrier between the husbandry staff and an elephant which had reached its trunk through the enclosure bars,” the report said. “The dog showed aggressive behavior, growling and lunging at one elephant and entering its enclosure before being called back by the manager.”

“The manager also reported the dogs’ having bitten the elephants doing the course of their work,” the report said.

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