Cape Argus

Africa’s elephants battle for life

Winning the fight against poachers is gaining momentum but there’s a long way to go

- Christophe­r Torchia

MIKUMI NATIONAL PARK: The elephant keeled over in the tall grass in Tanzania, where some of the world’s worst poaching has occurred. It wasn’t killers who targeted her, but conservati­on officials who shot her with a dart of drugs. Soon she was snoring. They slid on a 12kg GPS tracking collar and injected an antidote, bringing her back to her feet.

The operation was part of a year-long effort to track 60 elephants in and around Tanzania’s Selous Game Reserve, widely acknowledg­ed as “ground zero” in the poaching that has decimated Africa’s elephants.

The battle to save them is gaining momentum, with killings declining and some population­s growing again.

Legal ivory markets are shrinking worldwide and law enforcemen­t has broken up some traffickin­g syndicates, experts say.

But it’s too early to declare a turnaround. Poachers are moving to new areas and trafficker­s are adapting, aided by corruption.

The rate of annual elephant losses still exceeds the birth rate. And the encroachme­nt of human settlement­s reduces the animals’ range.

“We have a long way to go before we can feel comfortabl­e about the future,” said Chris Thouless of Save the Elephants, a group based in Kenya, where elephant numbers are increasing.

Britain this month announced a ban on ivory sales. In China, trade in ivory is illegal as of this year. In the US, a ban on ivory apart from items older than 100 years began in 2016.

If poaching can be brought under control in Tanzania, there is hope that the killing can be stemmed across Africa.

The continent’s elephant population has plummeted from millions in 1900 to about 415 000 today. A ban on trade in ivory across internatio­nal borders began in 1990, but many countries continue to allow domestic trade.

Increased demand in China fuelled a new wave of killings. Africa’s savanna elephant population declined by 30% between 2007 and 2014 to about 352 000, according to one census.

In Tanzania, the elephant population declined by 60% to 43 000 between 2009 and 2014, according to the government.

Much of the slaughter occurred in the Selous-Mikumi ecosystem. The killings appear to have slowed. A count in Selous-Mikumi last year added up 23 carcasses, 20% of the number found four years earlier. And African elephant poaching has declined to pre-2008 levels after reaching a peak in 2011, according to the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species.

It’s a positive trend, but there is speculatio­n that many areas have fewer elephants to kill.

“All the ‘easy’ elephants are dead,” said Drew McVey, East Africa manager for the WWF conservati­on group.

In Tanzania’s Selous region, more newborns were visible and elephants were moving widely outside officially protected areas, said Edward Kohi, principal research officer with the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute and leader of the WWF-funded GPS collaring programme.

Poaching of elephants would probably never be eradicated, Kohi acknowledg­ed.

When gains against the illegal ivory trade are made in one area, killings intensify in another. Internatio­nal seizures of smuggled ivory appear to be as large as ever, a possible sign of trafficker­s’ efforts to move stockpiles before business becomes too difficult.

Another worrying developmen­t is evidence of increased processing of ivory into jewellery and trinkets within Africa, allowing trafficker­s to transport ivory in smaller, harder-to-detect quantities.

Tanzania’s vast wilderness still offers hope for the world’s biggest land animal.

In 50 to 100 years, Kohi said, “when the human population is sky-rocketing, this will be one of the important areas for the conservati­on of elephants”. – AP/African News Agency (ANA)

TANZANIA’S VAST WILDERNESS STILL OFFERS HOPE FOR THE WORLD’S BIGGEST LAND ANIMAL

 ?? PICTURES: ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? STANDING TOGETHER: A herd of elephants form a protective circle against a perceived threat, just after one was shot with a tranquilli­ser dart in an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. The battle to save Africa’s...
PICTURES: ASSOCIATED PRESS STANDING TOGETHER: A herd of elephants form a protective circle against a perceived threat, just after one was shot with a tranquilli­ser dart in an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. The battle to save Africa’s...
 ??  ?? SWEET DREAMS: Vets use a 4x4 vehicle and a rope to turn over a tranquilis­ed elephant to attach a GPS tracking collar and remove the tranquilli­ser dart.
SWEET DREAMS: Vets use a 4x4 vehicle and a rope to turn over a tranquilis­ed elephant to attach a GPS tracking collar and remove the tranquilli­ser dart.
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