Wildlife & Biodiversity

Landscape-level approach necessary to address human-elephant conflicts

A study involving close monitoring of elephants on daily basis for two years in Karnataka has concluded that landscape-level management is necessary for mitigating human-elephant conflicts  

 
By S Suresh Ramanan
Published: Thursday 14 February 2019

A study involving close monitoring of elephants on daily basis for two years in Karnataka has concluded that landscape-level management is necessary for mitigating human-elephant conflicts.

Elephants are engrained in India’s culture and heritage. India has the largest Asian elephant population in the world. Elephants are a generalist species that are capable of adapting to diverse habitats. More than 5.01 per cent of land in India is under Protected Area — either national parks or sanctuaries. Elephants tend to move across diverse habitats for feeding and breeding. So steps are taken to preserve and protect these elephant corridors.

On the other hand, rising human population has altered natural forest ecosystems to a greater extent. There are large coffee plantations, tea estates, monoculture plantations adjoining protected areas. Wild animals like elephants and leopard tend to venture into these human-modified landscapes which ultimatelylead to human-animal conflict.

Studies have shown Karnataka holds the largest elephant population in India. It is also known for its predominant coffee cultivation.The region is witnessing increasing man-animal conflicts. Some elephants have also been translocated but that can only be a temporary solution. A team of wildlife researchers led by Ananda Kumar attempted to understand the habitat use pattern of elephants in these human-modified landscapes.

Researchers carried out the study in Hassan and Madikeri divisions of Karnataka. Apart from natural forest vegetation, the study area is dotted with coffee plantations on the sloppy lands, paddy cultivation in the valley, monoculture plantation fragments along with the backwaters of Hemavati reservoir. Researchers tracked movement of elephants across habitats and collected GPS reading during the wet and dry season of 2015 to 2017. They used ‘Manly selection ratio’, a statistical tool to process the data so as to decide preference or avoidance of habitats by elephants.

It emerged that elephants used monoculture plantations more or less similar in both seasons. Coffee plantations were used more frequently by elephants in the dry season and natural vegetation was visited frequently in dry than in wet season. Peculiarly, agriculture habitat was more frequently used by the elephants during wet than in the dry season.

There is a common belief that elephants specifically move towards agricultural lands in the dry season in search of water and forage. Kumar debunks that: Most of the crop damage by elephants occurs in paddy fields and it can be seen during late wet and early dry seasons. During hotter months, natural vegetation areas such as monoculture plantations and forest fragments are important resource areas which provided shelter for elephants in the study region.

Therefore, researchers have recommended landscape-level management strategy as a viable solution. It means that care should be taken while making changes in the land-use practices in habitats such as coffee, agriculture or clear felling of monoculture plantations of Acacia, Eucalyptus or forest patches etc as it may have negative effects on elephant conservation or aggravate human-elephant conflict.

Since elephants prefer to stay in monoculture plantations, forest departments should think strategically when to clear-fell these plantations. It might turn out to be a dangerous step if taken up without careful thought on negative consequences. If these places are not available, especially in places like Hassan, elephants will start using coffee plantations or agriculture habitats more frequently which may aggravate human-elephant conflict situation.

While speaking to India Science Wire, Vinod Krishnan, another member of the team, said: “We wanted to highlight this fact that though, forest remnants and monoculture refuges represent less than 7 per cent of the total study area, they are vital for elephants and helpful in containing conflicts. As you move from the southern part of the Western Ghats towards the north, most of the forest is fragmented. Forest remnants and monoculture refuge areas play a critical role for elephants. The inevitability of elephants using these modified habitats and people dependency determines the survival of both.”

Throughout the study, the monoculture plantations were referred to as 'refuges' and the data proves that elephants are visiting these refuges. In areas devoid of forests, the presence of monoculture refuges plays a critical role for elephants in terms of shelter and food due to the presence of a lot of secondary vegetation.

If there is no chance to increase forest cover or connect forest fragments or Protected Areas like in Hassan region, the study recommends the need to protect and retention of monoculture refuges for reducing incidents of conflicts. This does not mean that we increase monoculture areas at the expanse of forests. We need to have a deeper understanding of land-use on a broader scale for management. This is forms basis of landscape-level management strategy.

The research team included Vinod Krishnan, Mavatur Ananda Kumar, Ganesh Raghunathan (Nature Conservation Foundation); and Sreedhar Vijayakrishnan (National Institute of Advanced Studies). (India Science Wire)

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