In the latest incident yesterday a 30-year-old elephant named "Duan" -- "amputated" in Thai, on account of his damaged tail -- destroyed a small restaurant because he was apparently unable to resist the aroma of cooking food.
"He wanted to get salt, sugar and other seasoning. He likes them," Kanchit Srinoppawan, head of Khao Yai National Park in central Thailand, told AFP today.
The giant pachyderm needs the minerals along with the 200 kilogram daily food intake, he added.
The car was among dozens visiting the park on Saturday, Thailand's Children's Day.
Also Read
"The drivers stopped when they saw the elephant and the elephant could not cross the road so he felt stressed and stomped the car," Kanchit explained.
"It pushed the car with its tusks and the bonnet fell off," Kanchit said, adding the young male elephant then headed back into the forest.
It was the second time since January 1 that the same bull had attacked a vehicle.
"When you see an elephant do not honk, do not flash your car lights, do not take photos and keep your engine running," Kanchit said.
But ultimately the protected park belongs to the wildlife, Kanchit said, adding "we must balance between people, wild animals and tourism".