Every time elephants
come in proximity to Bangalore or any other large city, the issue gets
immense media attention bringing the topic of human-elephant conflict to the
forefront. Everyone looks for short-term solutions to the problem and the issue
loses momentum as soon as the immediate challenge is solved. Without a
comprehensive evaluation of the primary question as to why elephants are increasingly
leaving natural habitats and entering human-dominated landscapes, the solutions
can only be superficial.
If one would analyze
this question, the problems can be categorized into local and landscape level
problems. Similarly solutions are for short-term and the long-term time scales.
Local level problems
include degradation of elephant habitats due to forest fires, competition to
palatable food sources by livestock and other similar threats. Similarly
non-maintenance of physical barriers such as elephant-proof trench and electric
fences are prime causes of conflict. Wherever such barriers do not exist they
need to be immediately installed based on ecological criterion.
In the recent years,
in Bandipur Tiger Reserve, through improved and innovative methods of
maintenance of its physical barriers, it is proven that conflict can be reduced
to a great extent. During 2008-2011 the number of conflict incidences for which
compensation was paid in Bandipur was a mammoth 18,972 incidences with loss of
four human lives. However during 2012 it was reduced to less than 500
incidences with no human casualties.
Since elephants are
capable of moving long distances, the area required for their survival is vast
necessitating a landscape approach for protecting the species.
Documenting the
distribution and extent of human-elephant conflict will help in identifying hot
spots of the problem. From our analysis, for the period 2008-2011, nearly 9.5%
of the state’s geographical area covering 1,078 villages was affected by
elephant conflict, though the severity varies.
Importantly, halting
loss and fragmentation of elephant habitats needs precedence as part of the
long-term solution. Careful planning of siting of highways, dams, mini-hydel projects,
pipelines will help both development and elephant conservation. Certain areas
have to be avoided for implementation of such projects. For some elephant
ranges such as Bannerghatta, Cauvery and MM Hills, solutions should include the
neighboring state of Tamilnadu where similar protection activities have to be
initiated in Tali, Hosur, Baragur and other reserved forests.
Similarly
harmonizing landuse in key elephant ranges with conservation objectives taking priority
is a necessity. Declaration of eco-sensitive zones that helps in making land
around protected areas more wildlife compatible needs immediate implementation.
It is high time that
we develop and implement a comprehensive Karnataka Elephant Conservation Plan
that is based on ecological needs of elephants. If not, the problem will continue
with severe repercussions to elephants and humans.
This article has been published in Times of India on 25-06-2013