Elephants Eat Leftover Christmas Trees

An Asian elephant at the Berlin zoo eats leftover Christmas tree on January 3, 2017. TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP/Getty Images

Some people who celebrate Christmas decorate their trees with holiday treats: candy canes, gingerbread people, popcorn. It looks festive, and can even provide a furtive snack if the family dinner is taking too long. But for some, the entire Christmas tree itself makes for a holiday treat, serving as both toy and treat alike.

The zoo in Berlin, Germany, has famously fed its elephants Christmas trees for years. After the holidays, the animals receive small trees that they play with, lifting and throwing the small trees with their trunks. When hungry, they hold the trees down with their feet and strip off the branches and needles to munch on. Just like humans, animals prize novelty and variety, too.

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Before they eat the trees, the elephants will often carry them around and play with them like toys.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP/Getty Images
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This elephant at the Berlin zoo will strip the branches off the Christmas tree.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP/Getty Images

But don't rush down to your local zoo to donate your old tree. A Zoo Berlin elephant keeper told the Washington Post that the trees are unsold ones donated from local tree farms and vendors, not post-holiday discards from members of the general public. That's because trees kept in a house could have chemicals or other contaminants on them, and the elephants prefer to eat fresh, moist trees — not the dried-up, crispy ones creating fire hazards that many people may still have up well into the new year.

Thinking of inviting a pachyderm over to your next dinner party, and wondering what to plate? According to this Prague zookeeper, elephants — at least in Czech Republic, where zoos also feed their elephants holiday trees — prefer fir trees to spruce, and like pine least of all: 

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Even juvenile elephants get in on the Christmas tree snacking.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP/Getty Images
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Zookeepers at the Berlin zoo have fed their elephants trees for years, always right after Christmas and New Year's Day.
Sean Gallup/Getty Images

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