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Human-Elephant Conflicts in Bangladesh

by Sumit Chowdhury | 18-08-2018 23:28 recommendations 1

The human-elephant conflicts, mainly resulting from anthropogenic causes, have now become a regular phenomenon in the country, with such incidents spiking recently. According to the Forest Department, as many as 66 elephants have been killed with 236 humans losing their lives in human-elephant conflicts in the last 14 years.
At least six people, Rohingya refugees, were trampled to death last year in Cox's Bazar alone, once again drawing attention to the growing number of fatalities. An estimate by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) reads that some 760 out of 920 conflicts occurred centring crop damage from January 2014 to May 2016 in Rangunia, Khurusia, Jaldi and Chunati areas of Chittagong, and in Bandarban. 

Wildlife researchers apprehend that the construction of temporary camps for Rohingya people, by blocking the passages of wild elephants, may trigger the risk of elephant-human conflicts further in the Cox's Bazar region. As much as 4,000 acres of hills and protected forest areas adjacent to Teknaf Wildlife Sanctuary were destroyed while 2,000 acres of forestland have been acquired for setting up temporary shelters for Rohingya people.

The latest survey conducted by the IUCN revealed that Teknaf Wildlife Sanctuary is the home to 60-70 Asian elephants. However, camps were set up blocking the elephant routes. To mitigate the elephant-human conflicts, the Rohingya people should be relocated to a designated spot. 

Asian elephants are forest-dwelling animals which are often called the 'engineers' of the forest as they play a significant role in maintaining the ecosystems they inhabit. They are an indicator of good forest health. As a large herbivorous mammal, elephants require abundant foraging material and water for drinking and bathing. They prefer a mosaic of habitat with patches of forest, scrub forest, banana groves, forest clearings, intermittent open spaces, succulent grasslands, and savanna. 

A study shows that human settlements, agricultural lands, roads and highways, brick fields, army cantonments, village markets were constructed within or near the elephant movement routes and corridors. This further created human-elephant conflicts and resulted in human casualties, elephant deaths and damages to crops and properties. As elephants always follow their fixed routes and corridors during movement, construction of infrastructure have largely affected their mobility.


 
Asian Elephant

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  • Dormant user Sumit Chowdhury
 
 
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7 Comments

  • Muskan Priya says :
    Hi Sumit,
    human and animal conflicts are always harmful for each. Elephants are such a beautiful creation of god. It is really important to consider the importance of elephants and take measures to reduce such conflicts. thanks! for the report. :)

    Posted 03-09-2018 03:50

  • Abass Abdullah says :
    It is good that a simple solution is going to put this to an end

    Posted 02-09-2018 19:40

  • Xilola Kayumova says :
    Sumit, sad to hear about this problem in bangladesh...

    Interesting, thank you
    Posted 22-08-2018 14:18

  • Nikolay Dagaev says :
    Sumit, thank you! Interesting article. Makes you think about respecting the boundaries between the human world and the animal world.
    Posted 21-08-2018 03:50

  • Gyeongrin mentor says :
    Hello Sumit
    It really seems that there should be an effort to bring such conflicts to an end by finding a balanced point. Which also means that we should not damage living habitats only for the benefits of mankind.
    Thanks for the informative report!
    Posted 20-08-2018 16:07

  • Jeewon Shin says :
    I learned that elephants are ecosystem engineer because they consume trees and help keep green lands instead of woodlands. I think to keep the environment and to keep the ecosystem stable, we should protect the elephants and try our best to not harm them but still develop ourselves.
    Posted 20-08-2018 00:23

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