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Asian elephants are facing extinction in the wild throughout its range
of distribution. Due to fast growing human populations, the elephant use
areas throughout the Southeast Asia have been shrinking very rapidly.
Most of the wild elephant populations now are small and isolated as
their migratory routes been cut off by human settlements and activities.
As a result of their isolation, though the animal do manage to breed
successfully, suffer from a depleted gene pool because of in-breeding.
Asian elephants live in the region of the world with the densest human
population that is growing at a rate of over 3% per year. Confrontations
between elephants and people are thus inevitable. The growing conflict
between humans and elephants is one of the major challenges and of
highest conservation priorities as elephants can be a major destructive
force to land owners and users. Fragmented habitats have not only
exposed the animals to the risk of being killed by human being, but also
have exposed the human population to large scale confrontation with
settlement coming on their way of movement.
The situation is almost
similar in all the Asian Elephant bearing countries as most these
countries are either developing or underdeveloped and they are under
ever growing pressure from industrialization and urbanization. The
northeastern region of India is one of such remaining strongholds of
Asian Elephants, which is facing primary threat of rapid habitat
shrinkage and poaching for ivory trade.
The elephant
populations in the northeastern region are distributed in both north and
south bank of mighty river Brahmaputra and the Assam as the major state
sharing main portion of it. The current elephant population of Assam is
above 5000 distributed in National Parks, Sanctuaries, Reserve Forests
and in un-classed forest areas. The population in the north bank of
Brahmaputra sharing their common habitat with the adjoining Arunachal
Pradesh and Bhutan parts. Since historical times the North Bank area,
lies north of the river Brahmaputra in the states of Assam & Arunachal
Pradesh, provided a very good habitat for the Asian Elephants which
originally had a continuous belt of rich forest cover. A significantly
large population of Asian Elephants occurs here and is one of the most
important sites for the Asian elephant conservation. It contains the
largest elephant population in NE India and among the five largest
elephant populations in Asia. The north bank landscape may contain up to
10% of the species’ total population.
But gradually with the passage of time this
continuous belt of forest is getting fragmented and reduced which is
posing a great threat to the elephant habitats of the landscape. The
primary factor, which can be made accountable for this, is the ever
increasing human population and a resulting increase in their spatial
extent of influence & impact. The present scenario is such that, if the
remaining forests is not protected and conserved with immediate affect
the elephants and the rich biodiversity of this landscape may very soon
become a part of history. The many areas of the north bank, specially
entire Sonitpur district and areas adjoining to Manas National Park have
become the most human-elephant conflict sites of the world. The major
elephant corridors have been lost which earlier facilitate the animals’
seasonal and periodic movement in the entire landscape. The
traditionally strong support for their conservation is no longer easy to
maintain among today’s ever increasing human population and its demand
for productive lands. All these lead to wide scale human-elephant
conflict. In earlier years such depredations by wild elephants were
confining only in the peripheral areas (forest fringe villages) that to
for a very short duration of time. But now due the complete destruction
of their important habitat and route of their migration, the elephants
are compelled to stay for a longer period wherever they find suitable.
They started coming down to the areas far beyond the fringe villages, up
to the nearby towns and other developed areas. As a consequence of
depredation in such areas, continued for prolong period causing hardship
to the people, which also has changed the attitude of the suffering
people towards elephants to a negative direction. The affected people
became unsympathetic and hostile towards the elephants. The purpose of
wildlife conservation is always happened to be fragile by such outlook
of the human population living near forest areas. More importantly,
Govt. has no suitable provision of compensation for such types of animal
depredation including crop destruction. The people of the region are
generally very poor and depend mainly on agriculture. Most importantly,
they have practice of raising only one crop(paddy) in a year So, this
become a question of bread & butter when their only crop is destroyed by
wild elephant.
Dolphin Foundation has
been working on elephant conservation in the region for last three
years, manly on issues of Human-Elephant conflict, habitat lost and
promotion of elephant conservation awareness. Presently, the Foundation
is working in fringe and adjoining areas of Manas National Park with
support from Asian Elephant Conservation Fund of U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service.
Asian Elephant
conservation activities presently being carried out by Dolphin
Foundation :
Asian Elephant
Conservation Program in Manas National Park :
-
Building capacity of the
program associated people in anti-depredation and other survey
procedures.
-
Extensive study on the
human- elephant conflicts in the fringe areas of western part of
Manas National Park for developing a strategy to control the problem.
-
Development and
execution of an effective anti-depredation strategy (Elephant Raid
Prevention System) in the fringe villages affected by elephant
depredation.
1. Formation of
anti-depredation groups in the affected fringe villages.
2. Anti-depredation groups were
given necessary training on various methods of anti-depredation
procedures involving experts.
3.
Anti-depredation groups have
been regularly provided with the necessary equipments like dragon
lights, sounding devices etc.
-
GPS tracking and mapping
of the all the raiding tracts of elephants coming out of the park to
the neighboring areas.
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Habitat surveys,
identification and study of elephant corridors in the western and
southwestern areas of Manas, which are presently under private
ownership. The idea is to raise fund to purchase those land parcels so
that these corridors are protected for the continuous use of the
elephant population.
-
Small-scale community
support program for the affected fringe villagers for creating
goodwill and thereby to get them onboard the elephant conservation
program – Installation of solar street lamps in the affected fringe
villages.
-
Greening of the
peripheral non-forest fringe areas of Manas by promoting tree
plantation (Promotion of Community Forest), thereby to decrease the
pressure of firewood and logwood off the elephant habitat of the Park.
1) Donation of seedlings of commercially
important and fast growing species to the interested fringe villagers
for plantation in their unused personal land.
2) Plantation of fast growing tree species in
the unused public lands in the fringe village areas.
All together about 13000
seedling were donated to the villagers and 10000 seedlings were planted
in the village areas involving school children and local NGOs under
western range of Manas.
Supporting local Forest Department/ Park Authority for strengthening
elephant conservation.
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