Exploring the Intersection Between Land Use Dynamics, Habitat Connectivity and Human-Elephant Interactions in Shared Landscapes

Exploring the Intersection Between Land Use Dynamics, Habitat Connectivity and Human-Elephant Interactions in Shared Landscapes

Author: Grace Malley

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Growing human population and expanding geographic presence often forces wildlife and people into closer contact, frequently leading to adverse impacts on both human wellbeing and biodiversity. One of the most direct impacts is human-wildlife conflict (HWC), a growing challenge in the developing world. In Morogoro Region of south-central Tanzania, loss of crops and safety concerns due to elephants compromises livelihoods in many rural communities relying on subsistence agriculture. Drawing from land change and sustainability science, landscape ecology and social-ecological system theories and methods, this dissertation uses a case study of selected districts in the Morogoro Region to explore conflicts between humans and elephants. This area hosts parts of important protected areas and has a growing human population that is predominantly engaged in agriculture. The dissertation is organized around five main interrelated questions: The dissertation is organized around five main interrelated questions: i) What are the attitudes of the local subsistence farmers towards elephants and their conservation, and how has that changed over time? ii) What are the social-ecological determinants of human-elephant relationship in the study area? iii) How has land use/land cover (LULC) changed over the past 26 years in the study area? iv) What are the likely trajectories of LULC in the study area and what are the implications for human-elephant interactions? and v) What is the status of elephant habitat connectivity between protected areas in the study area, and how does it influence occurrences of HEC? Five major findings are highlighted: First, human-elephant conflict is affecting the relationship between people and elephants, revealing a shift in the conflict-coexistence continuum from positive to broadly negative. Second, LULC change is negatively affecting the landscape, particularly natural forests, and habitats. Third, in addition to natural drivers, such as slope and elevation, and spatial locations relative to existing cropland, social, economic and political decisions also influence LULC change. Fourth, cropland is likely to continue expanding in the future if the current rate of change continues, which may lead to increased human-elephant conflicts incidents. Finally, expanding human activities in the study area landscape has affected natural elephant migratory corridors to varying extent; with some corridors compromised more than others. This research provides a more complete explanation of the underlying complex human-environment interactions shaping the landscape in the study area. This is the first study to comprehensively assess landscape dynamics at multi-temporal scale. By simulating future LULC change, this research provides the opportunity to quantify and anticipate possible LULC changes in the study area, and prospects for changing human-elephant relationships in the future.


Elephant management

Elephant management

Author: Robert (Bob) Scholes

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2008-03-01

Total Pages: 551

ISBN-13: 1776142276

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Elephants are among the most magnificent – but also most problematic –members of South Africa's wildlife population. While they are sought after by South African and foreign tourists alike, they also have a major impact on their environment. As a result, elephant management has become a highly complex and often controversial discipline. The information needed to underpin vital decisions about elephant management has largely been unavailable to decision-makers, contested by experts, or simply unknown. As a result, the South African Minister for Environmental Affairs and Tourism convened a round table to advise him on this issue. The round table recommended that a scientific assessment of elephant management be undertaken to gather, evaluate, and present all the relevant information on this topic. Its main findings and recommendations are contained in this volume. Elephant Management is the first book of its kind, combining the work of more than 60 national and international experts. Extensively reviewed by policy-makers and other stakeholders, it is the most systematic and comprehensive review of savanna elephant populations and factors relevant to managing them to date. As such it is of interest to a broad spectrum of readers in South Africa and elsewhere. Above all, it is aimed at helping conservation policy-makers and practitioners to choose the best possible options for the sustainable preservation of these iconic animals.


Environmental Determinants of the Movement Patterns of Elephants in the Kruger National Park

Environmental Determinants of the Movement Patterns of Elephants in the Kruger National Park

Author: Andrew Purdon

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 200

ISBN-13:

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To improve the efficacy of protected areas in conserving ecological processes, initiatives such as the megaparks for metapopulations strive to increase connectivity between small and often isolated protected areas. Increasing connectivity between protected areas may mediate the apparent impact of elephants on vegetation and promote regional population stability through the spatial structuring of their populations. This relies on asynchronous population dynamics between interconnected subpopulations separated by distance. It is likely that the spatial responses of elephants to environmental variation drive this asynchrony. Therefore, developing a thorough knowledge of the spatial responses of elephants to their environment can inform management decisions to conserve suitable habitat, and promote population persistence through the maintenance of ecological processes. Most of what we know about the spatial responses of elephants is from studies that focused on explaining their spatial distribution or re-distribution in space, and studies that aimed to identify factors that determine resources use and selection. Recently, technological and analytical advances have marked a shift to studies that aim to assess the behavioural responses of animals to their environment by considering how individuals change their movement. Therefore, my approach in this thesis was to evaluate the environmental determinants of the movement patterns of elephants in the Kruger National Park. To do this, I used hourly location time series datasets acquired from 26-collared elephant cows distributed across Kruger. In chapter 3, I modelled the movement behaviour of the elephants using dynamic Brownian bridge movement modelling. I then evaluated how well different environmental factors explain changes in their movement behaviour using a mixed modelling approach at multiple temporal scales. Distance from water, primary productivity, vegetation structure, and temperature could explain changes in the movement behaviour of the elephants. The factors that could best explain changes in their movement behaviour varied between seasons and among temporal scales. Therefore, elephants adjusted their movement scale-dependently in response to their environment. Management interventions could induce artificial patterns of elephant movement, potentially uncoupling them from the processes that result in asynchrony in the dynamics of local populations. Therefore, the influence and consequences of management interventions such as the provisioning of water remain controversial. In chapter 4, I examined how the provisioning of water influences the movement patterns and the resulting spatial distribution of elephants. When elephants used artificial waterholes, they used areas more than double the distance away from natural water sources in comparison to when they used natural water sources. This increased the total area used by elephants by more than one third. The resulting change in the distribution of elephants may accentuate their impact on vegetation and have demographic consequences. Elephants respond to the distribution and availability of resources, and rather than returning to the artificial manipulation of numbers to relieve symptoms, I argue that management should continue to base their decisions on ecological principals. Many questions remain, and my hopes are that this research contributes to what we know about elephants and how best to manage them, or rather, how best to manage their responses to our interferences.


The Amboseli Elephants

The Amboseli Elephants

Author: Cynthia J. Moss

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2011-03-15

Total Pages: 401

ISBN-13: 0226542238

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Elephants have fascinated humans for millennia. Aristotle wrote of them with awe and Hannibal used them in warfare. This book is the summation of what's been learned from the Amboseli Elephant Research Project (AERP) - the longest continuously running elephant research project in the world.


African Elephant Status Report 2002

African Elephant Status Report 2002

Author: J. J. Blanc

Publisher: IUCN

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 316

ISBN-13: 9782831707075

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The African elephant is the largest living land mammal, and their potential impact on their habitats raises important management issues both for protected areas and unprotected land. This Status Report, derived from data contained in the African Elephant Database, is rich in data and information on numbers, distribution and current issues, and provides continent-wide information that is vital for conservation. It will help wildlife management authorities to harmonize their policy and management decisions across regions, as well as the continent, to reduce conflict and relax the pressure on habitats.