Hla Myet Chel et al.: Scanning electron microscopy of Quilonia renniei from Asian elephants revealing variation in coronal leaflet number. In: Parasitology. 2021, Band 149, Nummer 4, S. 529–533 doi:10.1017/S0031182021002110.
envfor.nic.in
Project Elephant. Government of India, abgerufen am 30. Januar 2016 (englisch).
fao.org
„Illegal capture, which by definition lacks official post-capture supervision, undoubtedly produces some very high mortality rates. ... Also found along the Thai-Myanmar border is the most horrible form of illegal capture: to shoot a cow elephant in order to catch her calf“. Siehe Kapitel über Myanmar, Abschnitt: Illegal capture, in: Richard C. Lair: Gone Astray - The Care and Management of the Asian Elephant in Domesticity. Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), Forestry Department, Rome, Italy and Forestry Department Group, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific (RAP). Printed by Dharmasarn Co., Ltd., Bangkok, 1997 (englisch; Abruf am 29. Juli 2024)
Project Elephant. wildlifeofindia.org, abgerufen am 30. Januar 2016 (englisch).
wildlifesos.org
Beispiel für Indien: Abschnitte Baby elephants are captured in the wild and „broken.“ und Here’s what goes into making an elephant „rideable“, in: Plight of Captive Elephants, auf der Website von: Wildlife SOS (Abruf am 29. Juli 2024)