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November 24, 2024
Solving India's deadly conflict between humans and elephants

Solving India’s deadly conflict between humans and elephants

The country is home to the world’s largest population of Asian elephants, a species listed as endangered, with declining populations across its home range of 13 countries. Their forest habitats are being eroded by agriculture and infrastructure, as India’s growing population of almost 1.4 billion people expands further into wild spaces.

“One of the biggest challenges in India is the fact that we have less than 5% of land set aside for wildlife, and there are millions of people who live adjacent to our protected areas or inside,” says Krithi Karanth, chief conservation scientist and executive director of the Centre for Wildlife Studies, headquartered in Bangalore, southern India.

At around 10 feet tall and weighing up to five tons, an elephant eats around 330 lbs (150kg) of food per day — mostly grass, leaves and bark. But more nutritious crops like sugarcane, rice and bananas can be especially enticing.
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“A lot of the elephant encounters happen by chance,” says Karanth, who was recently named a “Wild Innovator” by the non-profit Wild Elements Foundation, in a new program to support environmental projects led by women worldwide. Farmers trying to protect their crops can be accidentally killed by elephants when they try to chase them away, she says. “We’ve also documented a lot of deaths where people happen to be walking home at night and they just run into elephants.”
India accounts for 70-80% of all recorded human deaths due to elephants in Asia, according to Sandeep Kumar Tiwari, of the Wildlife Trust of India and the IUCN SSC Asian Elephant Specialist Group.
Tiwari says around 500,000 families are impacted by conflict with elephants every year across the country, mostly by the animals damaging their crops. Between 80 to 100 elephants are killed by human-related activity each year, he adds — some from retaliation acts like poisoning or electrocution, others from being run over by trains.
A herd of 46 wild elephants walk through the Gangaram Tea Garden, around 40 km from Siliguri, India, in November 2017.

Finding ways for people and elephants to co-exist peacefully will require a concerted effort from government, conservationists and the public to come together to solve this issue both in the short- and long-term, says Tiwari.

Finding effective solutions

Farmers sometimes use light and noise to scare elephants away, but these tactics can become less effective as the animals grow accustomed to them.

Planting crops that elephants don’t like to eat, such as chilis, lemons and ginger, digging trenches, and setting up alarm systems to warn people of nearby elephants can all help keep the animals away from agricultural land. Community groups can also be trained to guide elephants back towards the forest and away from crops.

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Another approach is to help people in rural communities deal with the impact that elephants can have on their daily life. The Indian government offers compensation for families who have suffered losses from wild animals but receiving a payment can be a long and bureaucratic process, according to Karanth.

She has developed a program to help rural communities access the compensation. They can call a toll-free number and her staff will assess the damage and help them submit the necessary paperwork to make a claim. She says the Wild Seve program has helped families submit almost 18,000 claims and receive almost $800,000 in compensation over the past five and half years.
Krithi Karanth, left, helps rural communities access compensation for wildlife damage.

In the long-term, one of the most effective ways to reduce the conflict will be to restore and protect forest areas and the ancient migration “corridors” elephants travel through, says Tiwari. These strips of forest link elephants’ natural habitats, and preserving them means the animals have less reason to stray onto farmland.

Tiwari’s organization, the Wildlife Trust of India, along with the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, and other partners, has identified 101 such corridors and is working with state and national government to protect and secure them. Designing infrastructure like roads with underpasses for wildlife can also help keep connectivity for these corridors.

In a country where elephants are seen as a sacred animal — the incarnation of the god Ganesh — by the majority Hindu population, both Tiwari and Karanth say tolerance for elephants encroaching on farmland is generally high. Karanth warns against complacency but is optimistic that the situation will improve.

“There is a deep religious, cultural affinity for this animal,” Karanth says. “I’m hopeful that people will do more for elephants because of this affinity.”