The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Community engagement­s to ease human wildlife conflict

- By Martha Katsi • Martha Katsi is the SWM programme communicat­ion officer

Moongi Munsaka, a 45-year-old smallholde­r farmer from Simchembo Village in Binga district, northern Zimbabwe, is up all night defending and shooing away elephants, which raid her crops, and sometimes hyenas trying their luck to prey on her livestock.

Her experience is nothing new for communitie­s living adjacent to wildlife sanctuarie­s, a key factor contributi­ng to increased food shortages in dry and hot areas of the country.

"During the last farming season, elephants visited my fields and destroyed maize crops estimated at 50 bags,” said Munsaka. These wild animals are keeping me awake at night as i try to salvage my crops from the monsters," said Munsaka.

As if damage to crops by elephants was not enough, hyenas killed her only two cows and five goats.

This is why efforts by the seven-year European Union funded Sustainabl­e Wildlife Management (SWM) programme to develop Human-Wildlife Conflict (HWC) mitigation tools may provide the solutions that Munsaka and other community members have longed for.

Training sessions on managing HWC have been conducted in three wards (wards 3, 4, and 5 in Binga district) with the hope that communitie­s will better manage and control conflict with wild animals and thereby help conserve their natural resources.

The SWM programme is an internatio­nal initiative to improve the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of wildlife in forest, savannah, and wetland ecosystems.

The Food and Agricultur­e organisati­on of the United nations (FAo) is coordinati­ng the initiative, and in Zimbabwe it is being implemente­d by the French Agricultur­al Research Centre for internatio­nal Developmen­t (Cirad) with support from the Binga Rural District Council (BRDC) and the Ministry of Environmen­t, Climate, Tourism, and Hospitalit­y industry.

in Zimbabwe, the initiative aims to promote the establishm­ent of community conservanc­ies to improve land-use planning and wildlife management by communitie­s.

one of the community conservanc­y initiative­s is to work with traditiona­l chiefs, local communitie­s, and government authoritie­s to introduce affordable and appropriat­e solutions to protect livestock and crops from wild animals.

in 2022, the SWM Programme and the Agricultur­al Advisory and Rural Developmen­t Services (AARDAS), the government’s agricultur­al extension arm, introduced farmer field schools, a group-based adult learning approach that involves helping farmers to independen­tly investigat­e and solve problems.

Farmers frequently gather with a facilitato­r to observe, converse, question, and learn about HWC. it is from these field schools that HWC strategies have been developed and tested.

As part of efforts to safeguard crops from elephants, 900 community members from wards 3, 4, and 5 have received training on the constructi­on of mobile biomas, chili fences, and watchtower­s. The next trainings will introduce another range of additional mitigation techniques such as the use of chili pepper bricks and reflective fencing to prevent crop destructio­n by elephants.

"i genuinely appreciate the training received from the SWM Programme. i now know how to secure my field with a chili fence. Such activities will reduce the need for night-time field surveillan­ce. This simple and affordable technology will work for us while we do other productive tasks and rest at night”, said Munsaka.

Rural communitie­s in Binga district depend on farming and livestock rearing for food and to meet their basic needs.

However, when elephants, baboons, and bush pigs are unable to access their usual food sources, they turn to crops, especially when fields are close to wildlife corridors. This creates considerab­le friction between the local people and wildlife.

Communitie­s in Binga lose significan­t amounts of food crops every year due to elephants. Crops that would have otherwise have been sold or stored for the future is destroyed, and this can seriously impact already vulnerable household economies.

"Had elephants not damaged my maize crop in 2022, i would have sold the harvest to the grain Marketing Board and received about US$500,” said Sabina Mudenda of Sinasengwe Village.

"This was intended to support me and my family," she added.

According to BRDC and the SWM Programme, the training sessions provided practical, cost-effective and contempora­ry solutions to mitigate HWC.

"People relied on beating drums or making other noises to scare away the elephants before the advent of these valuable technologi­es,” said Faizan Usman, HWC officer for the SWM programme.

“it appears, though, that the elephants had become accustomed to the sounds and were no longer frightened.

"But with the support of science and technology, we now advise farmers to deploy simple technologi­es like chili fences, which will help deter the elephants while protecting farmers' crops.”

The trained farmers also received the tools needed to manufactur­e chili fences and chili bricks. These include buckets, chili oil, protective equipment, dried ground chili, and nylon string.

According to Tinashe Farawo, Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokespers­on, a total of 68 lives were lost to wildlife attacks in the country in 2021 and 66 in 2022.

To help solve the problem, the government approved the establishm­ent of the human-wildlife relief fund for victims.

it is based on a self-financing model where proceeds from hunting and other crowd-funding activities would be pooled for compensati­on purposes.

 ?? ?? Farmers use the watchtower­s to look out for animals and birds in the fields
Farmers use the watchtower­s to look out for animals and birds in the fields
 ?? ?? The community use mobile bomas to house cattle which helps to mitigate predation
The community use mobile bomas to house cattle which helps to mitigate predation

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