Davu is a male African elephant currently, born this past August 24, held captive at the Fresno Chaffee Zoo in Fresno, CA. He is confined with 4 other elephants, who all suffer from their facility’s lack of sufficient space and from being unable to engage in their natural behaviors.
Davu is a male African elephant who was born on August 24, 2024 at the Fresno Chaffee
Zoo to two wild-born elephants who were captured
and imported to the United States to be used in the Association of
Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) captive elephant breeding program. Davu’s
name is the Somali word for "the starting of a new age," there could
not be a less fitting name for an elephant who is destined for a
life in captivity.
Davu's mother Amahle was born around 2008 in Hlane National Park in
Eswatini. In 2016 Amahle, along with her mother Nolwazi and 15 other
elephants, were taken from their natural habitat and imported to the
United States. Davu's father Mabu was born in Kruger National Park
in South Africa and at some point between his birth and 2003 he was
transported to the Mkhaya Game Reserve in Eswatini. In 2003, Mabu
and ten other elephants were imported to the United States. Davu has
14 half-siblings through his father—all are held captive at AZA
zoos.
Davu is housed in an environment wholly unsuited for elephants: a
tiny exhibit in a zoo that is located across from a nightclub and
restaurants and next to a railway and busy streets. Davu is held
captive with his mother, father, grandmother, and another newborn
elephant. Nothing about Davu’s unnatural zoo existence bears any
resemblance to what an elephant life should look like. Had Davu been
born in the wild like his parents, he would be spending his time
roaming freely with a large familial herd–being cared for by his
mother, aunts, grandmother, and female relatives–and playing with
other young elephants.
Davu, like all elephants, deserves to live freely in an environment
that respects his inherent dignity. Davu and the elephants he is
held captive with at the Fresno Chaffee Zoo should be relocated to
an elephant sanctuary that can provide them with the space and
freedom to meet their complex physical and psychological needs.