An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India

<p>This study entails an attitude assessment of the local people living at Mankanthpur Village, one of the bottlenecks in the Bailparao-Kotabagh corridor, Terai West Forest Division, on the issue of elephant conservation, human-(wildlife) elephant conflict, and the measures to mitigate it.  Da...

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Main Authors: Biba Jasmine, Dipankar Ghose, Sanjay Keshari Das
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society 2015-02-01
Series:Journal of Threatened Taxa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/1846
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spelling doaj-2a10d8eb2c96498499c9293f01ce01222020-11-25T01:41:24ZengWildlife Information Liaison Development SocietyJournal of Threatened Taxa0974-78930974-79072015-02-01726843685210.11609/JoTT.o3914.6843-521659An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, IndiaBiba Jasmine0Dipankar Ghose1Sanjay Keshari Das2Sustainable Development & Conservation Biology, 1213E H.J. Patterson Hall, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 - 3281, USAWorld Wide Fund for Nature-India, Lodhi Road, Lodi Estate, New Delhi 110003, IndiaUniversity School of Environment Management, Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University, Sector 16C, Dwarka, New Delhi 110075, India<p>This study entails an attitude assessment of the local people living at Mankanthpur Village, one of the bottlenecks in the Bailparao-Kotabagh corridor, Terai West Forest Division, on the issue of elephant conservation, human-(wildlife) elephant conflict, and the measures to mitigate it.  Data was collected through a questionnaire survey and several group discussions among the villagers.  The frequency of crop raids and group size of elephants were calculated.  Sixty-two crop raids took place during the study period (February–April 2010), and a mean sighting of 1.08 elephants per day was recorded.  Data from the survey reflects that about 3.53ha of crop land was damaged by the elephants during the survey period.  The people residing on the fringes of the park and in the villages along the Bailparao-Kotabagh Corridor were surveyed about the conflict impact.  Survey results indicate that the most effective management measures used were a combination of loud noise and scaring away elephants using fire.  Local peoples’ views regarding the current status of elephant raids and conservation were also documented.  Peoples’ reaction to compensation schemes was studied; 89% of the respondents feel an effective approach to compensation is a way to reduce sufferings due to conflict with wildlife.  Attempts to reduce the conflict by forming local elephant control teams and enclosing the affected village with a tall cemented wall are under trial.  The underlying assumption in this study is that if damage severely affects the livelihood of local communities, getting their active support, which is essential for conservation, will be difficult.</p><div> </div>http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/1846Asian Elephantattitudescommunitycrop raiding forest corridorhuman-elephant conflict.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Biba Jasmine
Dipankar Ghose
Sanjay Keshari Das
spellingShingle Biba Jasmine
Dipankar Ghose
Sanjay Keshari Das
An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
Journal of Threatened Taxa
Asian Elephant
attitudes
community
crop raiding forest corridor
human-elephant conflict.
author_facet Biba Jasmine
Dipankar Ghose
Sanjay Keshari Das
author_sort Biba Jasmine
title An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
title_short An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
title_full An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
title_fullStr An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
title_full_unstemmed An attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the Terai Arc Landscape, India
title_sort attitude assessment of human-elephant conflict in a critical wildlife corridor within the terai arc landscape, india
publisher Wildlife Information Liaison Development Society
series Journal of Threatened Taxa
issn 0974-7893
0974-7907
publishDate 2015-02-01
description <p>This study entails an attitude assessment of the local people living at Mankanthpur Village, one of the bottlenecks in the Bailparao-Kotabagh corridor, Terai West Forest Division, on the issue of elephant conservation, human-(wildlife) elephant conflict, and the measures to mitigate it.  Data was collected through a questionnaire survey and several group discussions among the villagers.  The frequency of crop raids and group size of elephants were calculated.  Sixty-two crop raids took place during the study period (February–April 2010), and a mean sighting of 1.08 elephants per day was recorded.  Data from the survey reflects that about 3.53ha of crop land was damaged by the elephants during the survey period.  The people residing on the fringes of the park and in the villages along the Bailparao-Kotabagh Corridor were surveyed about the conflict impact.  Survey results indicate that the most effective management measures used were a combination of loud noise and scaring away elephants using fire.  Local peoples’ views regarding the current status of elephant raids and conservation were also documented.  Peoples’ reaction to compensation schemes was studied; 89% of the respondents feel an effective approach to compensation is a way to reduce sufferings due to conflict with wildlife.  Attempts to reduce the conflict by forming local elephant control teams and enclosing the affected village with a tall cemented wall are under trial.  The underlying assumption in this study is that if damage severely affects the livelihood of local communities, getting their active support, which is essential for conservation, will be difficult.</p><div> </div>
topic Asian Elephant
attitudes
community
crop raiding forest corridor
human-elephant conflict.
url http://threatenedtaxa.org/index.php/JoTT/article/view/1846
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