Capacity building initiative on the dispersal and ranging patterns of elephants for effective management of human-elephant interactions
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Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun
Abstract
Wild Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) populations are distributed in four major regions namely North West, North-East, East-Central and Southern regional meta-populations across India. Amongst them, the East-central regional population spread across the States of Odisha, Jharkhand, southern West Bengal, Chhattisgarh, and lately in Madhya Pradesh suffers disproportionately high levels of human elephant conflict. Among the myriad challenges facing management of human-elephant conflict in the region, elephant range expansion into new areas is overriding. One such range expansion that resulted in acute human-elephant conflict is being witnessed in the State of Chhattisgarh. Although northern Chhattisgarh was historically an elephant range, elephants reportedly disappeared during the period 1920 to late 1980s. While episodes of sporadic elephant occurrence in Chhattisgarh was reported during
the period 1988- 1993, contemporary range expansion and concomitant human-elephant conflict began from the year 2000, and has accelerated during the last one decade. Faced with an enormous challenge of managing human-elephant conflict that is spatiotemporally dynamic unlike that of other elephant range States, constrained by limited Institutional capacities to assess and deal with the issue. Chhattisgarh Forest Department has been trying diversity its conflict mitigation strategies. Recognizing the need to objectively evaluate human-elephant conflict situation in the State, during the year 2017 Chhattisgarh Forest Department invited Wildlife Institute of India to conduct ecological research on elephants in Chhattisgarh with a three-year budget outlay. The project was a collaborative effort between Chhattisgarh Forest Department and WII. Considering the scope of the project, the project duration was further extended and eventually, the project lasted for the period July 2017 to March 2022. Being the final project report, the activities carried out as part of the project is summarized as under. Distribution and Demography In Chhattisgarh, the elephant distribution during the period 2012 to 2017 was reported from 16 Forest Divisions and four Protected Areas in the north and north-central regions of the state. The elephant population, as enumerated by Chhattisgarh Forest Department during 2021 , ranged from 250 to 300.
The adult sex ratio recorded during the study was 1: 4.5. About 44% of the female segment of the
population comprised of adults. Chhattisgarh elephant population is presently contiguous with other
elephant populations in the neighboring states i.e., Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand and in Odisha occurring
as a meta-population 1 and thus cannot be considered as an isolated population. However, within
Chhattisgarh, the population is relatively small and it occurs scattered over a large area as small and
disjunctive groups facing a perpetual risk of getting isolated by ongoing linear infrastructure and other
associated developmental activities in the State. If such groups get isolated, then they will not be viable
in the long run.
1 Meta-population: Population of small populations that are connected through dispersals
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Home Range, Movement Patterns & Dispersal, and Habitat Selection by
Elephants
During the period 2018-2022, WII-CGFD collaborative effort resulted in 10 elephant radio collaring in
Chhattisgarh. The resultant effort provided 3106 elephant days of tracking information. Each of the radiocollared
elephants provided an average of 310.6 (± 273) days of tracking data. As on 31 51 March 2022
when WII-CGFD collaborative project ended, two of the collared elephants (SD - Sehradev and MT -
Maitri) were having functional collars. The estimated average home range (95% minimum convex
polygon) of elephants in Chhattisgarh was 3172.8 km2 (± 2002.2 km2, Range: 462.3 - 6969.7 km2). The
95% kernel density home ranges of elephants were much lower averaging 512.3 km2 (± 235.3 km2,
Range: 126.5 - 748.9 km2). The elephant home ranges were not wholly well defined, and marked by
inter-annual shifts caused by exploratory behaviour. The elephant home ranges were relatively large.
The dry season home ranges were significantly lower than monsoon and winter ranges. However, dry
season home ranges of elephants are larger. The present study indicates that habitat quality in some of
the forest patches - particularly those that are large and contiguous with minimal of human interference
can potentially support elephants in the landscape. Thus, dry season ranges of elephants could serve
as a surrogate for habitat quality. Monthly variations in home ranges were significant, and best explained
by idiosyncrasies of individual elephants. Among the forest types open, moderately dense and very
dense forests classified by Forest Survey of India based on crown densities, elephants selected open
forests, that were predominantly juxtaposed with human-use areas. Although the crown density was
low, the patches of open forests support dense stands of Sal (Shorea robusta) coppice with rank
undergrowth offering adequate cover for elephants. Elephant habitat selection of these open forest
patches appears to be influenced by potential foraging opportunities in human-use areas, and further
facilitated by low inter-patch distance.
Genetic Structure of Elephants
Using 258 genetic samples collected from 9 Forest Divisions, elephant genetic structure in northern
Chhattisgarh was evaluated. Analysis indicates that at least two different elephant lineages occur in
Chhattisgarh. This implies that elephants occurring in Chhattisgarh have possibly come from different
areas. Within the two different lineages, high relatedness amongst the individuals was observed
corroborating with the general social structure of Asian elephant clans where individuals are mostly
related.
Crop Losses and Human Fatalities due to Elephants
Crop losses caused by elephants were acute and widespread in Chhattisgarh. To draw an analogy,
Karnataka's ex gratia payment towards crop losses by elephants during the period 2015-2020 was
comparable with Chhattisgarh, although the former's elephant population is 93% more than the latter.
The landscape-level assessment covering the whole of northern Chhattisgarh, and fine-scale
assessment covering select areas in Surguja circle identified correlates of crop losses at both spatial
scales. Elephant-related human deaths were widespread in the state. However, nearly 70% of
incidences occurred in areas of high intensity of habitat-use by elephants. The human fatalities due to
elephants were both temporally and spatially auto-correlated.
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Description
Keywords
Distribution, Elephants, Home range, Species dispersal, Movement pattern, Genetic structure, Habitat selection, Crop depredation, Human elephant conflict, Chhattisgarh