The Mercury

Incredible preservati­on of three bull elephants

- Adam Cruise

THREE bull elephants were saved from being shot and further damage to mango orchards averted after the bulls broke through the fences of a game reserve bordering the Kruger Park, raiding local farms and affecting human infrastruc­ture.

An elaborate rescue operation was launched by Elephants Alive, an organisati­on specialisi­ng in elephant research and promoting harmonious co-existence between people and elephants, after a call came in from the Hoedspruit Farm Watch that three young bulls had escaped from the Associated Private Nature Reserves (APNR) that border the Kruger Park between Hoedspruit and Phalaborwa in the Limpopo Province.

At first, the elephants hung around Hippo Pools Resort on the bank of the Olifants River but they soon began nocturnal raids on neighbouri­ng farms causing damage to mango trees and entering gates.

Elephants who break out of reserves and destroy crops and property are regarded, as Damage Causing Animals (DCAs), according to the National Environmen­tal Management Biodiversi­ty Act. This means farmers may apply to the provincial authoritie­s to have them legally shot.

“A big thank you must go to the farmers for their tolerance and care for the elephants,” said Elephants Alive CEO Michele Henley. “We hope to show, together with the support of our sponsors, that socalled Damage Causing Animals are often little more than trail blazers caught between expanding human developmen­t encroachin­g on ancient migration paths.

Elephants Alive supports the accumulate knowledge that these young risk takers now carry. When we as humans widen our thinking and circles of compassion, we may just come to appreciate the spatial knowledge of these adventurou­s bulls.”

The non-lethal alternativ­e employed by Henley and her team is to dart and relocate the elephants back into the wild. It was a difficult but expertly crafted procedure that began with the setting up of smokescree­ns of burning capsicum at the entrances to the mango farms for 10 consecutiv­e nights in an effort to prevent any further raids while they set the rescue plan in motion. Capsicum, a member of the chilli family, produces a spicy odour that when burnt is intolerabl­e to elephants.

The team then proceeded to track the elephants on foot. With some difficulty, due to the steep terrain and thick bush where the elephants hid in during the day, they were located and wildlife veterinari­an Dr Ben Muller was able to get close enough to dart one bull. The elephant was christened Wayne, in honour of Elephants Alive’s late partner in protection of elephants, renowned conservati­onist Wayne Lotter who was murdered in Tanzania last month.

Muller attached a satellite collar to Wayne the elephant before releasing him to rejoin the other two. With the secretive bulls’ movements now visible online, the plan was to track the group of elephants by air with the hope of darting all three in one go. Two helicopter­s, a couple of flatbed trucks complete with crane and a trailer, and a team from Wildlife Vets arrived from Nelspruit to carry out the operation. Poignantly, the teams were joined by Wayne Lotter’s family, wife Inge, and twin daughters Tamsin and Cara-Jane.

Following the signal from the tracking collar, the helicopter­s drove the elephants out of a steep kloof into a small open area. All three elephants were then darted from the air after which a bulldozer was brought in to clear the way for the trucks through the bush, and the anaestheti­sed elephants carefully hoisted and secured on to the trucks and driven out of the farmland to the safety of Balule Nature Reserve.

Since one of the bulls had been named Wayne, the other two escapees were named Derek and Lotter – Wayne’s middle and surname.

The relocation was generously funded by Humane Society Internatio­nal, TheYoung Presidents Organisati­on and Transfront­ier Africa’s sponsors, Pennies for Eles and Rettet Das Nashorn, in turn.

“The relocation was logistical­ly problemati­c yet spectacula­rly successful due to the hard-working team of profession­als and farmers who were involved in the rescue mission,” said Henley. – Conservati­on Action Trust

 ?? PICTURES: C HARRIET NIMMO ?? Inge, Tamsin and Cara-Jane Lotter with Wayne the elephant.
PICTURES: C HARRIET NIMMO Inge, Tamsin and Cara-Jane Lotter with Wayne the elephant.
 ??  ?? The elephants are relocated from farmland.
The elephants are relocated from farmland.

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