At least 25 wild elephants are set to be caught in Alur taluk of Hassan district
With a green signal from the Karnataka High Court on Tuesday, the
Department of Forests now sets about planning its biggest ever
operation to capture wild elephants since the State’s last ‘khedda’ in
1971, when 47 animals were captured.
At the very least, this would mean the capture and
taming of around 25 elephants in Hassan’s Alur taluk, the epicentre of
human-elephant conflict in the State. The Karnataka Elephant Task Force
in its report to the High Court in September 2012, identified two
regions — Alur and Tumkur district’s Savandurga — as “elephant removal
zones” for the “unacceptable levels” of conflict they encountered.
The department, however, places “the outer limit” for
the number of elephants to be captured at 150 and hope to extend the
‘removal zone’ to parts of Kodagu where human-elephant conflict is
intense. “The actual number we capture will be much less, but we’ll
have to take a call on areas such as Kodagu based on an assessment of
conflict levels and perceptions of people here,” said Principal Chief
Conservator of Forests (Wildlife) G.S. Prabhu.
‘Extreme measure’
Members of the task force don’t quite agree. Removing
wild elephants from a natural landscape is “an extreme measure” and one
that should be done with the “greatest judiciousness”, said M.D.
Madhusudan, scientist with the Nature Conservation Foundation and task
force member. Only two areas have been identified by the task force as
potential “removal zones” and Kodagu is not one of them, he said.
Alur was an anomaly of sorts and justifies the
approach, he explained. The conflict in Alur was intense, and the
elephant population was ecologically unviable. “Here, a herd of 25–30
elephants inhabit a tiny 5-sq. km forest patch circumscribed by
agricultural fields that they routinely raid.” Between 1986 and 2011,
elephants killed 46 people and injured over 240, according to the task
force report, creating a “fear psychosis among people that hampers
their ability to work and live normal lives.”
The situation in Kodagu was not adequately studied yet, said Raman
Sukumar, chairman of the Centre for Ecological Sciences, Indian
Institute of Science. “We first need to assess the conflict situation
in Kodagu, understand the dynamic of elephants here (are they
transitory, for instance) before we decide on a course of action.”
Meanwhile, the Department of Forests has set aside Rs. 4 crore to
create kraals to restrain elephants captured, which typically take a
year to tame, and new elephant camps. “The project can only begin in
January, after the rain,” Mr. Prabhu said, and added that the
department would be using a combination of methods that incorporate
elements from traditional ‘khedda’ (stockade traps) and also modern-day
chemical tranquilising.
Back to the wild
Even as it prepares for a large-scale capture of
elephants, the department, ironically, admits that its 10 camps, which
together have 91 elephants, are too crowded.
“We are looking at the possibility of returning around 30 of these back to the wild,” Mr. Prabhu said.
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