Gabon's marauding forest elephants test public patience with green
agenda
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[July 13, 2022]
By Alessandra Prentice and Christophe Van Der Perre
PONGARA NATIONAL PARK, Gabon (Reuters) -
Forest elephants are smaller than their cousins on the African savannah,
but in Gabon their destructive raids of farmers' fields are having an
outsized impact on support for the government and its conservation
agenda.
With over 10% of its land protected in national parks, Gabon has become
the main stronghold in central Africa for critically endangered forest
elephants, whose relative abundance and marauding habits are undermining
efforts to protect them there, authorities and scientists warn.
The long-standing conflict has become markedly more acute in the past
few years - 2021 saw the most widespread anti-elephant protests so far
by farmers across Gabon, according to the environment ministry.
"Some people cannot farm anymore - the elephants are eating so much of
their crops," Environment Minister Lee White told Reuters. "It has
become a political issue and is eroding support for conservation and for
the president (and) government."
Just outside the capital Libreville, splintered tree-trunks, trampled
undergrowth and churned-up earth mark where an elephant strolled through
the forest.
When they draw close to villages, these natural bulldozers can wipe out
carefully tended crops in just a few hours.
"You can see how people get mad and sometimes kill the elephants," said
guide Djakel Matotsi as he followed the elephant tracks in Pongara
National Park.
Up to 50 elephants are killed per year in revenge or self-defence, while
around 10 people have been killed by elephants in the past 2-1/2 years,
according to the environment ministry, which says there is not enough
data to quantify long-term trends.
The raids are causing food prices to rise, spurring rural exodus and
driving up perceptions that the authorities prioritise elephants'
interests while doing little to support the around third of Gabonese who
live in poverty, said Oliwina Boudes, head of a female farmers'
association.
"All rural communities harbour this feeling," she told Reuters.
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Elephants are seen on the edge of the forest at Pongara National
Park, near Libreville, Gabon, October 16, 2021. REUTERS/Christophe
Van Der Perre
NEED FOR DETENTE
The need for a detente is clear. Gabon is home to 95,000 or 60-70%
of all African forest elephants, which are facing dramatic decline
elsewhere, a study published in Global Ecology and Conservation in
December showed. Managing these herds while promoting rural
development in Gabon is of "critical importance to the species'
persistence", it said.
After nationwide consultations in 2021, authorities are rolling out
new initiatives this year to try to strike this balance.
To address the lack of data on elephant disturbances, the ministry
has launched a database and app to track and verify complaints while
for the first time, the government has set aside $4.5 million in
this year's budget to compensate farmers for trashed crops.
The government is also allowing charity Space for Giants (SfG) to
trial elephant-repelling electric fences around fields, customised
to simplify their installation and maintenance in tropical forest
conditions.
The 57 single-strand fences set up so far have repelled all
interactions with elephants, SfG said in June. It plans to install
500 by year-end if it can get the funding.
Even with the fences, the government will need to do more to help
farmers cope with elephants as it pursues its 'Green Gabon' plan for
sustainable development, said John Poulsen, elephant ecologist at
Duke University, who is helping SfG assess the impact of the fence
trial.
He said that the government could potentially deploy agents in the
field to help keep troublesome elephants away from villages and
provide training so communities can deal with problem animals better
themselves.
"If they have that perception that elephants are that bad ... it
absolutely affects their outlook and willingness to work with the
government and with other conservation efforts," he said.
(Additional reporting by Gerauds Wilfried Obangome in Libreville;
Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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