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March of the elephants: China’s rogue herd spotlights habitat loss

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A mammoth trek across southern China by a herd of elephants that has captivated the world with their playful antics has thrown a spotlight on the loss of their habitat and conservation challenges.

The lumbering mammals have journeyed around 500 kilometers from their home in one of the longest animal migrations of its kind recorded in China.

Scientists are still baffled by what prompted the elephants to leave their home at the Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve, bordering Laos.

Since setting off in spring last year they have pilfered shops and trampled crops worth over $1 million, and thousands of residents have been evacuated from their path.

тАЬFor some reason these elephants felt that their traditional home range was no longer suitable тАж and then they just left to find somewhere else,тАЭ said Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz, an elephant specialist at the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden.

тАЬBut they didnтАЩt have a destination in mind. They are just moving around trying to find a place that will work for them.тАЭ

Officials have been tracking the wandering herd with drones round the clock, worried they might go on a rampage if they are stressed.

Elephants rely on infrasonic sound тАФ the vibration of their feet тАФ to communicate, but in towns they can be easily confused due to vehicle noises.

тАЬWhat has surprised me the most is that these elephants are very healthy and look very happy despite roaming in densely populated, unfamiliar areas,тАЭ Campos-Arceiz said.

тАЬThese elephants are very playful, which tells me that they are fine,тАЭ he added.

Firefighters from Yunnan Forest Fire Brigade monitor the movement of wild Asian elephants through a screen in Yimen county on June 15. | CHINA DAILY / VIA REUTERS
Firefighters from Yunnan Forest Fire Brigade monitor the movement of wild Asian elephants through a screen in Yimen county on June 15. | CHINA DAILY / VIA REUTERS

Forests in far southwest Yunnan province where the elephants came from are rapidly giving way to rubber and tea plantations, and herds have become marooned in disconnected preserves.

China is one of the few places in the world where the population of the endangered Asian elephant is increasing, due to strict anti-poaching laws and conservation efforts.

The countryтАЩs wild elephant numbers have doubled to over 300 animals in the past three decades.

But their habitats have shrunk by nearly two-thirds over the same period, said Zhang Li, a professor of ecology at Beijing Normal University.

Habitat fragmentation тАФ with hydropower plants and highways blocking old migration paths тАФ makes it difficult to find mates and socialize.

Electric fences built to safeguard villagers also risk injuring wandering animals.

Forest destruction has led to a surge in conflicts between elephants and villagers in the region in recent years.

From 2013 to 2019, more than 70 people have been trampled to death and dozens injured by marauding elephants in Yunnan, data from the local wildlife office shows.

Scientists are unsure whether a changing landscape was the prompt for the herdтАЩs migration, which has made them famous online and drawn international media to follow the march.

Fans have cooed over videos showing a matriarch saving a calf from a gutter and one where elephants line up in a courtyard to drink water with one successfully turning on a tap with its trunk.

State TV launched a 24/7 live elephant video stream to follow the movements of the 15 animals, which includes two calves born on the road.

But with the elephants showing no sign of returning home or settling down in a new place, attempts by wildlife officials to direct them could be risky, experts warn.

Using truckloads of pineapple and sugarcane to bait them could irreversibly domesticate the herd.

тАЬItтАЩs like getting a child used to eating sugar,тАЭ said Wang Hongxin from Beijing Normal University.

During his surveys of elephant habitats in Yunnan, Wang has seen how тАЬelephant canteensтАЭ planted with corn, bamboo and wild bananas to dissuade the beasts from pilfering fields have changed their diet, making them more prone to disease.

тАЬThe current march spotlights the threats facing Asian elephants,тАЭ he added, warning conflicts would rise if habitat size is further reduced.

тАЬHumans must retreat and let land return to the wild.тАЭ

Migrating Asian elephants rest near Yuxi city, in China's southwest Yunnan province, on June 20.  | YUNNAN PROVINCIAL COMMAND OF THE SAFETY PRECAUTIONS OF THE MIGRATING ASIAN ELEPHANTS / VIA AFP-JIJI
Migrating Asian elephants rest near Yuxi city, in ChinaтАЩs southwest Yunnan province, on June 20. | YUNNAN PROVINCIAL COMMAND OF THE SAFETY PRECAUTIONS OF THE MIGRATING ASIAN ELEPHANTS / VIA AFP-JIJI

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