By Ingmar Lee & Krista Roessingh
We are appealing for your immediate help to protect South India's
last significant herds of Wild Elephants! Please take a few moments to
familiarize yourselves with the predicament of these magnificent
animals!
Recent estimates of the number of Asian elephants (Elephus maximus)
remaining in the wild range from 35,000 at the low end to 50,000 at the
upper end. Asian elephants once ranged throughout most of Asia, but
their habitat has been reduced to isolated fragments, often with
boundaries that restrict traditional migrations and gene flow.
This expanding human settlement/wildland interface has lead to
increased pressure on populations due to human-elephant conflicts
ranging from poaching to crop-raiding and roadkills. The distribution
of Asian elephant populations in India is well known but population
estimates, ranging from 26,000 to 31,000 are up to 14 years out of date
and many are based on less than rigorous data collection. Also,
effective population sizes are lower due to selective poaching of males
for ivory.
Elephant populations in most ranges are thought to be declining due to
a combination of factors, the main ones being habitat loss due to
expanding human settlement, increasing resource demands, and habitat
fragmentation. Habitat fragmentation leads to the isolation of
populations, and for wide-ranging animals, it may result in several
isolated populations that are too small to be viable. Furthermore,
inbreeding depression can exacerbate loss of genetic viability due to
small population size, eventually leading to population extinction.
For these reasons it is imperative that immediate efforts be focused
towards protecting known key populations and creating corridors that
can facilitate animal migration and gene flow.
Long-term conservation of elephants must include conservation of large
contiguous wildlands. Elephants are a far-ranging species with large
nutritional requirements, which utilize a variety of habitats including
forests, shrublands/savannas, and grasslands.
In South India, the continuous elephant range extending from the
Brahmagiri Hills, south through the Nilgiri Hills, and east through the
Eastern Ghats is one of 14 out of Asia's 59 known elephant ranges
containing wildland area large enough to support substantial elephant
populations.
This 12,000 sq. km area, spanning three states (Karnataka, Tamil Nadu,
and Kerala) is thought to house 6,300 elephants, the largest remaining
population of Asian elephants in the world. The contiguity of the
region's forest habitat is not maintained by the patchwork of protected
areas, and the range has become highly fragmented.
The Nagarhole, Bandipur, Wynaad, and Mudumalai protected areas and the
adjacent Nilgiri North Division have been identified as one of the four
most important zones within this range for long-term conservation of
elephants, due to its relatively intact habitat and large elephant
population. These four parks and their adjoining Reserve Forests cover
over 3300 sq. km of forest and support a population of 1800-2300
elephants.
The Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve encloses this entire region. However the
Sigur Plateau, on the east side of the Mudumalai Wildlife Sanctuary in
Tamil Nadu state, which serves as the link between the Eastern and
Western Ghats for migrating elephants, remains largely unprotected as a
buffer zone. In addition to elephants, tigers, panthers, wild dogs,
gaur, hyenas, and several other large mammals also live in the forests
of the Sigur plateau. The conservation of this critical elephant
habitat would not only serve to protect one of the largest Asian
elephant populations, but would also benefit the entire ecosystem,
including other rare species.
There are seven settlements on the Sigur plateau, and six identified
corridors used by elephants for movement and habitat that wind between
their widening footprints, Reserved Forests (RFs), and the steep slopes
of the Nilgiri hills to the south and those of the Moyar Gorge to the
north. Most of these settlements were historically established along
rivers and are now enclosed within Revenue Land boundaries.
As their size has increased along with population growth (mainly due to
hydroelectric construction projects), development, agriculture and
tourism, village lands have expanded to form a near-continuous boundary
between the Sigur plateau's RFs, leaving only narrow corridors. Animal
movement and access to surface water is now largely prevented by
human-made barriers such as electric fencing and agricultural
activities.
The need for protection of these corridors was identified decades ago
and has since been replicated in numerous studies. Consequently,
several attempts have been made to have Sigur's RFs included in the
sanctuary. However, the Tamil Nadu Forest Department has yet to move on
such recommendations. Under the current intense level of development,
these corridors could be lost in the very near future. Consequently,
the carrying capacity of the protected area network will be diminished
and local elephant populations, without access to water, are likely to
disappear.
All of the elephant corridors are suffering from varying levels of
degradation due to their proximity to settled areas. Corridor width
between settlements varies from only 400-1000m. These corridors can be
secured by the protection and restoration of forested areas within
Revenue Lands that are in proximity to the corridors, which amount to
about 400 ha or 10 sq. kms.
One of the major issues is extensive grazing in protected areas,
including parks, by thousands of cattle kept by villagers to produce
truckloads of dung, much of which is sold to organic coffee plantations
in Kerala for use as fertilizer.
An integral facet of elephant conservation is to solve the dilemma of
alternative livelihood requirements for villagers and tribals living in
proximity to wildlife habitat. Unregulated, unplanned wildlife tourism
in Sigur has also become a large part of the problem.
The most seemingly insurmountable obstacle to the protection of the
elephants is, quite tragically, rampant bureaucratic inertia. South
India's final wildlife refugia are screaming out for a single lead
agency, with the power to command and coordinate the myriad
interjurisdictional bureacracies that are complicating this simple
conservation project. Additional major threats include:
• Pressure from local reliance on cattle dung as a source of income,
• Pressure from local reliance on fuelwood gathered from the forests,
• Ivory poaching continues with virtual impunity throughout the area,
• A massive increase of unregulated "eco-tourism" safari development,
• Corruption and mismanagement by government officials,
• Pressure to construct 10 kms. of highway through the Sigur Forest,
which will immediately result in a large traffic flow through the
forest,
• Accumulated scientific research data is jealously guarded by a select
few elephant scientists who compete for lucrative project funding.
We are appealing to you to PLEASE immediately write to the Government
of India, to DEMAND that they get serious about protecting South
India's wild elephants!
Priorities are in the following order:
1) ESTABLISH A SINGLE LEAD AGENCY WITH SUFFICIENT POWER AND RESPONSIBILITY TO COMMAND AND COORDINATE THE CONSERVATION EFFORT
2) IMMEDIATELY SECURE THE KNOWN ELEPHANT CORRIDORS IN THE AREA AROUND MASINAGUDI, TAMIL NADU
3) RAISE THE STANDARD OF PROTECTION IN ALL RESERVED FORESTS THAT CONTAIN VIABLE ELEPHANT HABITAT
4) A PERMANENT MORATORIUM ON ANY FURTHER ROAD DEVELOPMENT IN THE SIGUR RESERVED FOREST
5) IMMEDIATE INSTIGATION OF INITIATIVES FOR CATTLE-TENDERS AND TRIBALS TO ENCOURAGE WILDLIFE-CONGRUOUS LIVELIHOOD ACTIVITIES
___________________________________________________________________
India's wild elephants are in serious trouble and they need your help!
Here is how you can help!
Please click on this following link to the "Ecological Internet," read
the backgrounder and endorse the sign-on letter. The letter will then
be automatically sent out to hundreds of government officials, media,
elephant scientists, ENGO's and business which have 'interests' in
these magnificent wild animals.
Let them know that the world is watching!
http://www.ecoearth.info/alerts/send.asp?id=india
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