"Hold on, hold on, we asked them, don't shoot that one," says biologist Now it looked like Mountain Bull was going to join the statistics, unless "He must have been taken in by some bad friends that night," says With a growing population to feed, and rebounding numbers of elephants in The team, with tracking software help from the Mountain Bull, for example, might trek from one safe forest to another 14 times Saving elephants is a complicated business in Africa, because in places such "Our ultimate mission is better land use planning," says Hall. Tracking elephants
The adult elephant living near Mount Kenya had absconded from his reserve home
to pillage villagers' crops with a posse of other male tuskers. Outraged by the
elephants eating their livelihood, a regular occurrence in the last two years,
impoverished locals wanted the elephants tracked down and killed.
Iain Douglas-Hamilton of Save the Elephants, a conservation research group based
outside Kenya's Samburu National Reserve. Mountain Bull was one of theirs, one
of 20 elephants in the region collared with global positioning systems. The
researchers track the pachyderm's whereabouts both for science and for salvation,
hoping to find ways to let elephants better coexist with people across Africa.
Africa was home to 1.3 million elephants three decades ago, but the losses to the
ivory trade since have cut that number roughly in half. Kenya, for example, saw
its elephant population plummet 85% from 1973 to 1989, according to the
World Wildlife Fund.
Douglas-Hamilton and his colleagues could use their research to plead his case.
"We were surprised to hear he had been out with the crop raiders," says remote
sensing scientist Jake Hall. "We knew he usually stayed in safe places." A look
back at their records confirmed that in fact, that Mountain Bull had travelled to
the farmer's fields only once in the last two years — the recent night he was
spotted in the fields.
Douglas-Hamilton, with a chuckle. Save The Elephants asked for mercy for
Mountain Bull, pointing to his mostly untarnished record, and the wildlife
managers let him off the hook. "His life was saved by our radio tracking data.
" The other elephants, regular pillagers of the poor farmer's fields, won't be so lucky.
some locales, conflicts between farmers and elephants are a regular occurrence,
Douglas-Hamilton says. The same technology the conservation researchers use to
track the whereabouts of elephants, highlighted in the
September issue of National Geographic, can be used to save the lives of similar
delinquent elephants. You may think cellphones are everywhere in your daily life,
but that's nothing on Kenya, where even elephants (and some zebras in a related
project) carry them. Mountain Bull's leather collar carries a cellphone that
text-messages his GPS location every hour. If the team sees him headed for the
fields again some night, they can call wildlife managers to send a jeep by to
scare him into the woods. Similar avoidance training has taught other elephants
to stick to their side of the fence, Hall says.
Environmental Studies Research Institute of Redlands, Calif., hopes to spread
such lessons across Africa, with similar projects underway in Mali, Gabon and
South Africa. "Animal tracking is nothing new but we've really pushed the
technology," says Douglas-Hamilton. Plotting elephant travels on Google Maps
allows the researchers to follow their charges for years. In particular, tracking
has revealed "streaking" undertaken by elephants, long straight-line treks from
reserve to reserve sometimes covering dozens of miles in a few days. Preserving
these corridors is a key requirement for elephant survival, Douglas-Hamilton
suggests, much like corridors for wildlife in the American West. "I gave a talk in
Montana on corridors and everyone nodded along and said it was just the same
with the grizzlies from Canada," he says.
a year, sometimes taking roads right past villages on his way. Other elephants
follow highways in Kenya on their trips, Hall says. In Mali, tracking has revealed
desert-dwelling elephants following loops hundreds of miles long, following water
sources until the dry season drives them all back to one lake. In Mali, one
elephant named Bahati that the team saved from a desert hole turned and streaked
40 miles in a day to a lake.
as South Africa, populations are growing. They have too many. The emphasis there
must be on re-opening corridors for elephants that keep them away from crops,
says Douglas-Hamilton. In Mali and Kenya, the focus shifts to preserving existing
corridors to keep hard-hit populations alive.
gives tremendous insight into how the creatures think before heading for new homes.
"They gather together and make these very low-pitched hums for awhile, sort of
a 'let's go, let's go,' signal. And then they are off," says Douglas-Hamilton.
Elephants are ultimately motivated by three "s"s, he adds. "Sex, sustenance
and safety." Not so different from humans, "they are tremendously social creatures,"
Friday, September 26, 2008
GPS saves elephants from slaughter
The call came last week from Kenyan Wildlife Services. Mountain Bull had to die.
Posted by
Wade G. Burck
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2 comments:
"Sex, sustenance
and safety."
Aren't men driven by the same s's?
Amy
yes we are Amy LOL
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