Youngest elephant at famed US circus dies

Ringling Elephants

In a Jan. 4, 2016 photo, Mike, a two-year-old Asian elephant bull, works with his handler Trudy Williams, during a media tour of the Center for Elephant Conservation in Polk City, Fla. Mike died of a virus “despite the heroic efforts of our veterinary and animal care staff,” Ringling Brothers said in a statement. Orlando Sentinel via AP

MIAMI, United States—Ringling Brothers, America’s best-known circus, announced Thursday the death of its youngest elephant at a conservation center where it is retiring the animals after criticism from rights groups.

Mike, a two-year-old, died of a virus “despite the heroic efforts of our veterinary and animal care staff,” Ringling Brothers said in a statement.

Animal rights group Peta said that the elephant’s death was “no surprise.”

Ashley Settles, Ringling’s director of veterinary care, said the illness progressed aggressively with Mike beginning to show symptoms on Saturday and dying by Monday.

“No one knows why the virus manifests this way in some elephants, since most elephants harbor the virus and never become ill,” she said.

Mike was born in June 2013 at the Ringling conservation center in Florida and was the youngest elephant there.

Ringling Brothers announced two weeks ago that it was relocating all its elephants by May to the center, which develops breeding programs and research aimed at the animals’ protection.

“Stressful conditions have been linked to the highly fatal disease that killed this calf, which disproportionately impacts captive baby elephants,” Rachel Mathews of Peta said.

Peta, which for years has criticized use of elephants in circuses, repeated its call for the company to end its breeding program and put the animals in “a proper accredited sanctuary.”

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