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130,000 elephants - too many
      #17978 - 14/08/04 12:24 PM

In 1990, there were 55 000, and the official view - in the Elephant Management Plan of 1991 - was that their number should be kept at 60 000, requiring the "removal" of 3 000 per year to sustain it.



We probably have 130 000 elephants living with us, now, mainly in the north.




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How to Deal With 130 000 Elephants? Part 1

Mmegi/The Reporter (Gaborone)
OPINION
August 13, 2004
Patrick Van Rensburg


We probably have 130 000 elephants living with us, now, mainly in the north. That's more than any other country has, anywhere on earth. There's one of them for every 4.5 square kilometres, overall, against about 3 people for every square km. In the north, at 123 000 odd, their density is much higher than nationally. In 1990, there were 55 000, and the official view - in the Elephant Management Plan of 1991 - was that their number should be kept at 60 000, requiring the "removal" of 3 000 per year to sustain it.

The Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) is now developing a (clearly overdue) new elephant management policy and has been looking at issues, options and recommendations related thereto. In fact, what it is busy with is what it calls the third report of the project to review the Elephant Management Plan of 1991, following the "Inception Report and the Stakeholders' Workshop Report". In this third report, it is noted that, "No control measures have actually been taken". This seems to reflect a reality that elephant management is a highly contested issue, more especially because - as the Report notes - "Only about 28 percent of the elephant population is found in national parks".

One of the major factors related to contestation of culling, for example, is that "the international public do not understand the issues that result from large elephant populations". There could be threats of economic sanctions if large scale culling was undertaken.

"No species, other than man, can modify habitats as rapidly and extensively as elephant", writes Graham Child, who was responsible for some years for elephant culling in Zimbabwe. "At a safe carrying capacity, elephants may act as a pruning agent and benefit biological diversity by opening up and altering the age structure of plant communities, but once numbers exceed this level, overpopulation impacts seriously on habitats. By virtue of their dominance as herbivores, elephant damage has a cascading effect through the ecosystem; degradation is not a uniform process, but is accompanied by deterioration past a series of critical thresholds over which recovery is often, at best, problematical in the short to medium term".

In its latest report, the DWNP acknowledges that any earlier beneficial effects of elephant presence have now been overtaken by the near disappearance along the Chobe River of woodland including riparian forest. "Habitat changes may have had secondary effects on other species; bushbuck in Chobe declined considerably over twenty years".

Ultimately, the Report suggests, "it might be expected that affected habitats will become less able to support the elephants themselves - as numbers continue to increase without any apparent moderation of rate while habitats are deteriorating simultaneously.

"There is a very real danger of a sudden population crash as in the Tsavo ecosystem in Kenya. A mass die-off would have very serious aesthetic, ecological and economic consequences, as it did in Kenya. Whether or when a population crash is going to occur, however, cannot be forecast."

The DWNP report was preceded by:

l direct consultations with communities living within the elephant range

l a workshop at which stakeholders directly but variously involved with elephants were able to voice their opinions, concerns and objectives regarding elephants

l study of literature on the subject of elephant ecology, biology, disease management, Community-Based Natural Resource Management legislation, Botswana Government policies and social development

l a workshop attended by experts in various relevant fields to discuss the technical aspects of elephant management options

Background information is provided on the following themes:

l numbers and trends

l loss of range and habitat

l cross-border populations

l habitat change/loss of bio-diversity

l human-elephant relationships

l general public attitudes

l sustainable utilisation

l trade in elephant products

l economic factors in elephant management

l illegal hunting

These issues will be looked at next week, but it is important to look back at what the objectives of the 1991 Elephant Management Plan were:

l Manage elephants on a sustainable multiple-use basis in accordance with the 1986 Wildlife Conservation Policy and the 1999 Tourism Policy.

l Maintain elephant populations at their 1990 level by removing annual increment.

l Maintain elephant occupied woodland in acceptable state, subject to climatic influence.

l Reduce elephant populations if research and monitoring indicate unacceptable changes to elephant habitat.

l Maintain biodiversity and essential life support systems in the national parks and game reserves.

l Reduce conflicts between elephants and humans.

l Support and undertake elephant population and elephant habitat research and monitoring programmes. Seek amendments to the 1989 CITES resolution such that Botswana's elephants will revert to Appendix 11

There was some success in achieving these objectives, ie:

Progress was made in the sustainable multiple use management with the reintroduction of safari and citizen hunting, with low annual quotas. In 1997, Botswana and other southern African countries were successful in their bid at CITES to have their elephants down-listed to Appendix 11. Some ivory sales have taken place. Habitat research and monitoring has been carried out and continued elephant population monitoring has successfully demonstrated the increase in populations.

However, elephant populations have not been kept at their 1990 level. Woodlands within the elephant range were not maintained in an acceptable state (defined as the 1990 state). It is not possible to state whether bio-diversity and essential life support systems have been maintained, as a baseline for this was not established. Conflict between elephants and humans continue at an unacceptable rate.

What is worrying is that the elephant population was allowed to double in 14 years.


http://allafrica.com/stories/200408130528.html


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News
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How to deal with 130,000 elephants? [Re: News]
      #18305 - 22/08/04 03:21 AM

If "a meaningful population reduction" was to take place requiring the "removal" of 10 000 elephants a year, say, the DWNP report says it would yield 40 tonnes of ivory, 8 000 tonnes of meat, and 650 tonnes of hide per year.

*

Increased trophy hunting would not, the DWNP report argues, necessarily mean substantially greater income, because the larger number of animals shot would include many with smaller, less valuable, tusks. Trade in elephant products is moreover restricted. Only sport-hunting trophies and live animals for "in situ conservation programmes" can be exported. Only unprocessed hides can be exported.

*

economic value of elephants is essentially confined to their attraction of tourists in terms of safari hunting and non-consumptive wildlife viewing.
....
contribution to GDP of elephant in wildlife viewing in 2000, as P397 million and P159 million respectively".



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How to Deal With 130,000 Elephants?

Mmegi/The Reporter (Gaborone)

ANALYSIS
August 20, 2004
Patrick Van Rensburg


SOUTHERN Africa holds the great majority of the continent's elephants with between 197 000 and 214 000 animals, according to the third report of the project of the Department of Wildlife and National Parks (DWNP) to review the Elephant Management Plan of 1991.

Of these, over 50 percent are in Botswana. The latest (2002) aerial surveys give an estimate of 123 000 in the North. There are also elephants in the Tuli Block and south of the Boteti River, west of the Makgadikgadi National Park and in western Ngamiland.


Botswana's northern elephants are part of the larger population, which stretches from Zimbabwe through Botswana and into Namibia. There are now a number of cross-border conservation initiatives being pursued by various governmental and non-governmental organisations, including the "Four Corners" project in the extreme north that will entail joint management of wildlife with Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

In 1990, it was generally felt that elephant numbers in Botswana had reached a level at which reduction to a recommended sustainable 60 000 was necessary. As was noted last week, no control measures have been taken since. Elephants have, as a result, wrought great changes in the landscape, causing a "loss of scenic value, of shade and useful plant species, which are all viewed with concern".

Crop raiding by elephants, fence damage and damage to water systems anger communities. Elephants were also considered to be "impacting negatively" on the availability of veldt products. Communities affected want numbers to be reduced by controlled shooting.

Two communities, which operate effective Community Based Natural Resource Management over elephants, felt that killing - apart from licensed hunting - was less acceptable than other methods.

Wider, general public attitudes sounded by the Department were less in favour of killing, though the majority polled "did not shrink from the principle when it was necessary".

Government policy on utilisation of elephants (indeed, all wild life) is that the full potential of the resource should be utilised. If "a meaningful population reduction" was to take place requiring the "removal" of 10 000 elephants a year, say, the DWNP report says it would yield 40 tonnes of ivory, 8 000 tonnes of meat, and 650 tonnes of hide per year. However, restrictions on exports would "severely limit the values of the products".

Increased trophy hunting would not, the DWNP report argues, necessarily mean substantially greater income, because the larger number of animals shot would include many with smaller, less valuable, tusks. Trade in elephant products is moreover restricted. Only sport-hunting trophies and live animals for "in situ conservation programmes" can be exported. Only unprocessed hides can be exported.

The economic value of elephants is essentially confined to their attraction of tourists in terms of safari hunting and non-consumptive wildlife viewing. The DWNP uses a rather abstract calculation based on a "biomass ratio of 41 percent" to estimate "the total gross output, and the contribution to GDP of elephant in wildlife viewing in 2000, as P397 million and P159 million respectively".

The Department reckons that while the economic contribution of the livestock sector "likely exceeds that of the wildlife sector, in quite large parts of the country the returns to land for wildlife use far exceed those for livestock production".

I noted last week the DWNP acknowledgement of the failure to keep the elephant level at that of 1990, and to maintain woodlands in an acceptable state. This is blamed on a lack of qualified staff.

Six new key points of policy are now: to minimise human-elephant conflict; maximise elephant populations while ensuring the maintenance of habitats and bio-diversity; manage elephants to the benefit of the national economy; enhance benefits from elephant management to the rural population; meet international obligations; and manage elephants on the basis of sound scientific information.

These aims are laudable, as similar aims were 14 years ago. The problem will lie in their implementation, now as then - especially maximising populations while maintaining habitats.

The DWNP report acknowledges the need for improved public relations, and more specially the need to enlighten the general public about the issues that result from large elephant populations. "It is felt that restrictions under international conventions such as CITES would be lifted if international opinion were better informed."

Control of numbers is clearly a key issue and the report looks at various means of doing this, noting advantages and disadvantages of each.

They include culling. Its advantages are that large numbers can be removed quickly; it is inexpensive if products can be sold; and, the DWNP says it causes minimal stress to animals if done properly,

On the other hand, it is "emotionally unappealing", potentially disruptive of tourism; requires large resources of equipment and skilled personnel; expensive and wasteful if there is no market for products; logistically difficult in some areas; dangerous, and can only be undertaken by skilled professionals.

"Ethical and humane considerations are paramount to counter negative publicity," the report notes.

Translocation is more humane but hugely expensive. Passive dispersal may have to be "encouraged".

Contraception cannot be seriously considered until there is a proven feasible method.

Other possibilities include increased safari hunting, increased citizen hunting, cropping (shooting an entire elephant family group), live sales to international markets, and domestication.

The Department also has proposals to fence off protected stands of local vegetation enclosing a full spectrum of vegetable types of the area as a basis of preservation for later extension.

I am sure the department would like to hear from readers interested in reacting to their proposals.



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African News Headlines at a glance daily




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