Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-7cvxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T01:01:15.742Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Human–elephant interactions in areas surrounding the Rungwa, Kizigo, and Muhesi Game Reserves, central Tanzania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 November 2019

Kwaslema Malle Hariohay
Affiliation:
Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, Arusha, Tanzania
Wilbright Abraham Munuo
Affiliation:
AfricanBioServices, Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Realfagbygget, No-7491, Trondheim, Norway
Eivin Røskaft*
Affiliation:
AfricanBioServices, Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Realfagbygget, No-7491, Trondheim, Norway
*
(Corresponding author) Email [email protected]

Abstract

This study assesses the patterns of crop damage by elephants Loxodonta africana in areas adjacent to the Rungwa, Kizigo and Muhesi Game Reserves in Tanzania. We used a questionnaire survey to collect data from a total of 210 household heads from seven villages, with 30 household heads in each village, during June–August 2015. Proximity was a significant factor influencing losses, with crop farms within < 1 km from the reserves having higher losses, followed by those 1–5 km and > 5 km distant. Most households (81.0%) < 1 km from a reserve reported crop damage whereas those within 1–5 km (65.9%) and > 5 km (20.0%) reported less damage. Most of the losses (79.8%) occurred in the first half of the year (the wet season). Immigrants reported higher average losses to crops than Indigenous respondents. Noise making, flashlights, setting fire around fields and disturbance by shooting were the methods used to deter elephants from entering crop fields. We recommend that communities around these game reserves avoid areas that are < 1 km from the reserve boundary, plant crops such as chilli, use honeybee Apis mellifera fences to deter elephants from their crops, and receive education on available mitigation methods, to help minimize crop losses to elephants.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is included and the original work is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2019

Introduction

Encroachment on wildlife habitats as a result of human activities, such as crop cultivation and settlement, results in the fragmentation and loss of elephant habitat (Dublin & Hoare, Reference Dublin and Hoare2004; Kikoti et al., Reference Kikoti, Griffin and Pamphil2011; Western et al., Reference Western, Waithaka and Kamanga2015; Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). This has brought elephants and humans into close proximity, intensifying interactions between them (Hoare, Reference Hoare2015; Redpath et al., Reference Redpath, Bhatia and Young2015). Tanzania has a large population of African elephants Loxodonta africana (Mduma et al., Reference Mduma, Lobora, Foley and Jones2010; Chase et al., Reference Chase, Schlossberg, Griffin, Bouché, Djene and Elkan2016) that inhabits c. 45,000 km2 of central Tanzania, where relatively sparse human populations are living in scattered communities, relying predominantly on subsistence farming (Mduma et al., Reference Mduma, Lobora, Foley and Jones2010). Within this area the Rungwa, Kizigo and Muhesi Game Reserves support a high concentration of elephants (Mduma et al., Reference Mduma, Lobora, Foley and Jones2010; Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, 2015; Chase et al., Reference Chase, Schlossberg, Griffin, Bouché, Djene and Elkan2016). These reserves are unfenced, facilitating elephant movements into the surrounding areas (Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, 2011). Crop farmers need access to fertile land and water, but the elephants also use the same areas as corridors for movement, leading to conflicts (Sitienei et al., Reference Sitienei, Jiwen and Ngene2014; Von Gerhardt et al., Reference Von Gerhardt, Van Niekerk, Kidd, Samways and Hanks2014; Røskaft et al., Reference Røskaft, Larsen, Mojaphoko, Sarker, Jackson, Skarpe, Du Toit and Moe2015). Elephants receive conservation attention from various institutions, including wildlife authorities, non-governmental organizations, international organizations and inter-governmental organizations (Røskaft et al., Reference Røskaft, Larsen, Mojaphoko, Sarker, Jackson, Skarpe, Du Toit and Moe2015). The species is imbued with a high existence value by people in the developed world, who find elephants alluring because of their power, beauty, size and connection to wild nature (Dickman, Reference Dickman2010). This high existence value has generated considerable market value globally, manifested predominantly through photographic tourism, trophy hunting, and zoos (Dickman, Reference Dickman2010; Dickman & Hazzah, Reference Dickman, Hazzah and Angelici2016). Although the international community ascribes a high value to elephants, local human communities may incur substantial costs from living close to them, including economic losses from crop damage. This can be devastating in impoverished rural communities where crop farming is a major livelihood (Graham et al., Reference Graham, Notter, Adams, Lee and Ochieng2010; Røskaft et al., Reference Røskaft, Larsen, Mojaphoko, Sarker, Jackson, Skarpe, Du Toit and Moe2015; Dickman & Hazzah, Reference Dickman, Hazzah and Angelici2016). Other direct costs include damage to property such as infrastructure and water systems, attacks on people, and injuries or loss of life.

Coexistence with elephants entails both indirect and opportunity costs (Barua et al., Reference Barua, Bhagwat and Jadhav2013; Khumalo & Yung, Reference Khumalo and Yung2015; Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017). The economic cost can be substantial for people who invest in crop farming, guarding and elephant control systems. The time required for farm protection limits the amount of time available for activities such as attending school, and families who are affected severely by crop damage are unable to pay expenses such as school fees (Alcamo et al., Reference Alcamo, Bennett and Assessment2003; Khumalo & Yung, Reference Khumalo and Yung2015; Røskaft et al., Reference Røskaft, Larsen, Mojaphoko, Sarker, Jackson, Skarpe, Du Toit and Moe2015). Additionally, people feel unsafe during daily activities such as walking to and from school, collecting firewood and accessing shops (Dickman & Hazzah, Reference Dickman, Hazzah and Angelici2016; Mayberry et al., Reference Mayberry, Hovorka and Evans2017). This may affect the socio-economic development of communities (Alcamo et al., Reference Alcamo, Bennett and Assessment2003; Graham et al., Reference Graham, Notter, Adams, Lee and Ochieng2010; Barua et al., Reference Barua, Bhagwat and Jadhav2013; Chapman et al., Reference Chapman, Van Bavel, Boodman, Ghai, Gogarten and Hartter2015; Røskaft et al., Reference Røskaft, Larsen, Mojaphoko, Sarker, Jackson, Skarpe, Du Toit and Moe2015; Fisher, Reference Fisher2016).

In human-modified landscapes, animals with large home ranges, such as the African and Asian Elephas maximus elephants, may enter fields, causing crop damage either by foraging on crops or trampling (Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012; Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017; Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). Human–elephant interaction is a major challenge facing the management of protected areas in both Africa and Asia (Sarker, Reference Sarker, Gereta and Røskaft2010; Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012; Mace et al., Reference Mace, Barrett, Burgess, Cornell, Freeman, Grooten and Purvis2018). The negative impacts of elephants are associated with increasing settlement and farming activities close to protected areas. This increases the likelihood of contact with elephants when they leave the protected area (Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). Elephants tend to move outside protected areas when crops are ripening, attracted by crop sugar content and palatability (Stearns & Stearns, Reference Stearns and Stearns2010; Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012; Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017). Frequent crop damage causes farmers to develop negative attitudes towards the conservation of elephants and to be disinclined to share land with them (Hoare, Reference Hoare2015; Hariohay et al., Reference Hariohay, Fyumagwa, Kideghesho and Røskaft2018).

Mitigating the impacts of elephants is hindered by poor living standards in developing countries, where people may still clear new fields by cutting trees in areas of former elephant habitat (Dublin & Hoare, Reference Dublin and Hoare2004; Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012; Hariohay et al., Reference Hariohay, Ranke, Fyumagwa, Kideghesho and Røskaft2019; Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). Increased human population density results in increased contact between elephants and people, especially in areas adjacent to protected areas (Khumalo & Yung, Reference Khumalo and Yung2015; Acharya et al., Reference Acharya, Paudel, Neupane and Köhl2016). The Tanzanian government has introduced a compensation scheme for people affected by problem animals such as elephants, based on the distance people live from a protected area (United Republic of Tanzania, 2011). The scheme covers crop losses and property damage, depredation of livestock, and injuries and fatalities to people (United Republic of Tanzania, 2009, 2011). Compensation for crop losses is per ha up to a maximum of 5 ha, with no compensation for farms within 0.5 km of a protected area. Compensation for crop farms 0.5–1 km, 1–4 km, 4–5 km and > 5 km from a protected area is USD 11, 22, 33 and 44 per acre (0.41 ha), respectively (United Republic of Tanzania, 2011). At the time of the establishment of this project we used these distances, set by the Government (United Republic of Tanzania, 2009), but we were not able to find any evidence of the use of these criteria, and the compensation scheme is not well known. The Wildlife Conservation Act of 2009 (United Republic of Tanzania, 2009, 2011, 2018) discourages human activities within 0.5 km of protected areas, but there has not been any research on how the Act affects settlement close to protected areas.

There is increasing pressure on protected areas from surrounding communities as a result of expansion of crop farming fuelled by an annual human population growth rate in Tanzania of c. 3.0% (United Republic of Tanzania, 2017). Farming is encroaching on elephant habitats, and there is a need to document and analyse the pattern of impacts of elephants on crop farms. Improved knowledge of the pattern and frequency of impacts based on distance from protected area boundaries will enable wildlife managers to educate farmers regarding safe distances from reserve boundaries for farming (Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017; Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). Acharya et al. (Reference Acharya, Paudel, Neupane and Köhl2016) recommended avoiding areas nearest to reserve boundaries in Nepal. Gubbi (Reference Gubbi2012) and Hill (Reference Hill1997) found greater damage to farms closest to reserve boundaries in southern India and western Uganda, respectively. However, the relationship between distance from a protected area and the types of crop damage by African elephants requires further investigation. Apart from avoiding areas close to protected areas, other mitigation measures used to prevent elephants damaging crops include planting unpalatable crops such as chilli around farms, and beehive fences (Enukwa, Reference Enukwa2017).

The challenge of managing co-existence between elephants and people arises because different people have different views or interests, and also because elephants are viewed as dangerous and destructive animals (Dublin & Hoare, Reference Dublin and Hoare2004; Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017). Research on human–elephant interactions can therefore improve knowledge of the costs associated with land-sharing between people and elephants (Graham et al., Reference Graham, Notter, Adams, Lee and Ochieng2010; Barua et al., Reference Barua, Bhagwat and Jadhav2013). Understanding the dynamics of these interactions can help identify management strategies to protect both humans and elephants. Traditional mitigation measures, such as chasing elephants away by shouting, drum-beating, noise-making, use of fire crackers, or using lights and torches, are diverse yet often ineffective because they address the symptoms of the problem rather than its causes (Graham et al., Reference Graham, Notter, Adams, Lee and Ochieng2010; Hoare, Reference Hoare2015). Sustainable solutions that reduce or minimize elephant impacts require that spatial and temporal patterns of elephant movement are incorporated into land-use planning and, in addition, that the needs of local communities are recognized in mitigation schemes.

The main objective of this study was to assess the spatiotemporal impacts of elephants on crop farms in areas adjacent to the Rungwa, Kizigo and Muhesi Game Reserves, Tanzania. We tested three hypotheses: (1) elephant impacts are higher on farms < 1 km from protected area boundaries than on farms located 1–5 km or > 5 km from the boundaries (because crops are more accessible close to the boundary); (2) there will be a higher frequency of crop damage incidents in the wet than in the dry season because the wet season (January–June) is when crops are cultivated; (3) immigrant farmers experience more frequent damage to their crops by elephants than do Indigenous farmers because the former tend to establish fields closer to reserve boundaries.

Study area

Rungwa, Kizigo, and Muhesi Game Reserves, covering a total area of 17,340 km2, lie in the Manyoni District in central Tanzania (Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism, 2011; Fig. 1). According to the most recent dry season aerial census, in 2015, these reserves have the largest elephant population in Tanzania, with an estimated 15,836 individuals (Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute, 2015; Chase et al., Reference Chase, Schlossberg, Griffin, Bouché, Djene and Elkan2016). The reserves are unfenced, with no clearly established buffer zone, and are bordered by a public road to the north. Along this public road, people have established settlements and crop farms. Formerly there were no restrictions on the establishment of human settlements and crop farming outside the reserves but the Tanzania Wildlife Conservation Act no. 5 of 2009 sections 5(b) and 74, and recent regulation on wildlife corridors and dispersal areas (United Republic of Tanzania, 2018), describe the requirement for securing buffer zones, wildlife corridors, dispersal areas, and critical habitats for core protected areas. Settlements and farming are banned in these areas (United Republic of Tanzania, 2009, 2018). The landscape of the study area is characterized by shrublands, open forests, settlements and urbanization. Within these open forests and shrublands people cultivate crops; these areas also provide habitat for elephants (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1 Locations of the 210 households (circles) in the seven villages (30 households in each) in which we conducted the questionnaire survey.

Methods

Sample units and design

We conducted a questionnaire-based survey in a total of 210 households in seven villages around the three game reserves during June–August 2015. In each village we selected 30 households, and in each household only the head or a representative adult male or female responded to our questionnaire. Here, an adult means any member of the household who was ≥ 18 years old. As defined by the United Republic of Tanzania (2013) a household ‘refers to a person or group of persons who reside in the same homestead/compound but not necessarily in the same dwelling unit, have same cooking arrangements and are answerable to the same household head’. We used stratified random sampling to select the villages for surveying, where the attributes of the strata were villages that used to be corridors for elephants. Elephants used to pass through Kanoge, Majojoro, Rungwa and Kintanula villages to the Rukwa/Lukwati and Ugala Game Reserves. Three other villages (Damwelu, Ipande and Njirii) are in wildlife corridors and dispersal areas for elephants. These corridors connect the Muhesi Game Reserve to Chaya and Wembere Game Controlled Areas (Mduma et al., Reference Mduma, Lobora, Foley and Jones2010). In the selected villages we used random sampling to select households. Estimates of the number of households in each village were obtained from village leaders at the time of the survey: Kanoge (320), Majojoro (500), Rungwa (450), Kintanula (250), Damwelu (400), Ipande (500) and Njirii (300). Village leaders created registers of the names of available households, and we randomly sampled from these. The total number of households in the seven villages was 2,720, and thus we sampled 7.7% of the total. For each household we estimated the distance of its farm to the nearest reserve boundary, which we later grouped into three distance categories: < 1 km, 1–5 km, and > 5 km from the game reserve boundary. The Tanzanian government considers a distance of < 0.5 km from the protected area boundary as a buffer zone and, therefore, there is no compensation of crop loss to animals for farms at this distance (United Republic of Tanzania, 2011).

Questionnaire survey

The questionnaire survey included both closed and open-ended questions (Supplementary Material 1). The questions enquired about immigration status (migration from regions other than Singida, Dodoma, Tabora and Mbeya), farm size and distance to the nearest reserve boundary, and incidents and proportion of crop damaged by elephants (and any mitigation measures) during 1 June 2014–31 May 2015. The ethnic groups resident in the study area were Taturu, Nyaturu, Gogo, Kimbu and Nyamwezi; immigrants were recorded as Sukuma and others. Immigrants were people who had moved to the area after so-called operation village (the process of establishment and formal recognition of villages) during 1972–1974. All interviewees gave prior, informed consent before they were included in the survey. At the beginning of the interviews, respondents were informed they could seek clarification at any time during the interview. KMH and WAM conducted the questionnaire survey, in Swahili. We anonymized respondents by not asking their names and assigned a number to each questionnaire.

Data analysis

We performed all statistical data analyses using SPSS 21.0 (IBM, New York, USA). We examined differences in crop damage incidence (with a χ 2 test) and mean area of crop damaged (with an F test to compare two variances) by elephants, partitioned by six independent variables: village, farm distance to nearest game reserve boundary (< 1 km, 1–5 km and > 5 km), season (wet: January–June; dry: July–December; annual: January–December), immigration status (Indigenous, immigrants), farm size (< 11, 11–20, > 20 ha), and water sources shared with elephants (yes/no). We also used a generalized linear model to investigate the effect of village, farm distance to nearest game reserve boundary, season, immigration status, farm size, and water sources shared with elephants on the area of crop damaged. Significance level was P < 0.05.

Results

Mean age of respondents was 44.6 ± SD 12.4 years, with 34.3% of the 210 respondents aged 44–56, 29.0% > 56 years, 22.9% 31–43, and 13.8% 18–30 years. The majority of respondents (67.1%) were male. Ninety households were > 5 km from the reserves' boundary, 79 were < 1 km, and 41 were within 1–5 km. Of the 210 respondents, 52.4% were immigrants and 47.6% were Indigenous. Kanoge village had the greatest proportion of immigrant respondents (86.7%), followed by Damwelu (70.0%), Majojoro (56.7%), Kintanula (53.3%), Ipande (50.0%), Rungwa (43.3%) and Njirii (6.7%). Mean household size was 9.5 ± SD 5.9 people (range 1–56). Immigrants had a greater mean household size (11.6 ± SD 6.9 individuals) than Indigenous people (7.3 ± SD 3.3).

When we asked respondents to mention the major problem caused by elephants, 51.9% mentioned crop damage, followed by damage to infrastructure such as water taps (19.5%), fear of collecting firewood (17.2%), and impeded access to shops and schools (11.4%). The frequencies of reported crop damage incidents varied significantly between villages, with the highest numbers of crop damage incidences recorded in Kanoge, followed by Kintanula, Rungwa, Damwelu, Ipande and Majojoro, and the fewest reports from Njirii (Table 1). Crop damage incidents varied significantly with distance from farm to the nearest reserve boundary (Table 1). Most of the respondents with farms < 1 km from the boundry (81.0%) reported crop damage by elephants as a major problem, followed by those with arms 1–5 km (65.9%). Few respondents with farms > 5 km (20.0%) reported this as a major problem.

Table 1 Crop damage reported by 210 respondents, by village, nearest distance to game reserve boundary, season, immigration status, and water sources shared with elephants Loxodonta africana, with Pearson χ 2 test for differences within each of the four variables.

The estimated annual total losses as a result of elephant damage were 437.5 ha of crops, a mean of 4.0 ± SD 4.6 ha per affected household per year. The estimated losses varied with distance to the nearest reserve boundary, with those < 1 km reporting the greatest mean crop losses and those > 5 km the lowest mean crop losses (Table 2). The villages of Rungwa, Damwelu, Kanoge and Kintanula reported significantly more losses than the villages of Ipande, Njirii and Damwelu. Among the 109 households that incurred crop damage, most respondents (79.8%) reported the wet season to be the time in which most crop damage by elephants occurred, followed by the dry season (17.4%); some respondents (2.8%) reported damage throughout the year.

Table 2 Estimated mean area of crops damaged by elephants reported by the 109 households that indicated crop damage was a major problem, by village, nearest distance to reserve boundary, season, immigration status, farm size and water sources shared with elephants, with F test for differences within each of the four variables.

Among the 110 immigrant households, 47.3% had farms close to the nearest reserve boundary, 30.0% > 5 km, and 22.7% 1–5 km distant; the majority of the 100 Indigenous respondents (57.0%) owned farms far from the nearest reserve boundary (> 5 km), followed by 27.0% < 1 km and 16.0% 1–5 km distant (χ 2 = 15.84, df = 2, P < 0.001. Most immigrants (73.6%) reported crop damage incidents by elephants as the major problem whereas only a few of the Indigenous people (28.0%) reported this as a major problem (Table 1). Immigrants were farming larger areas (mean 8.6 ± SD 9.0 ha) than Indigenous people (mean 4.1 ± SD 3.2 ha; F = 22.33, df = 1, P < 0.001). Immigrants experienced greater mean losses of crops to elephants than Indigenous respondents (Table 2).

In the generalized linear model, village, distance to nearest reserve boundary, farm size, shared water sources, presence/absence of elephants, and immigration status together explained 47.3% of variation in crop damage area, but season did not make a significant contribution (Table 3). The majority of respondents (96.2%) were engaged in multi-crop cultivation of maize, millet, sorghum, tobacco and beans, and 3.8% cultivated only maize. When asked to describe the crop most damaged by elephants, 56.8% of farmers mentioned maize only, followed by multiple crops (19.0% of farmers), sorghum (9.6%), beans (8.6%) and groundnuts (6.0%). When asked the common reasons for crop damage by elephants, respondents mentioned the field being close to the reserve boundary (30.0%), elephants searching for water on village land (20.0%), the preference of elephants for cultivated crops rather than wild plants (17.1%), and a combination of reasons (15.3%); 17.6% indicated they did not know why elephants damage crops.

Table 3 Generalized linear model with crop damage area as the dependent variable and six independent variables: village, distance of farm to nearest reserve boundary, season, immigration status, farm size, and water sources shared with elephants.

1 This parameter is set to zero because it is redundant.

Most of the 210 respondents (148, 70.5%) were aware of mitigation measures, with significantly more Indigenous respondents (58.8%) aware of these measures than immigrants (41.2%; χ 2 = 33.28, df = 1, P < 0.001). Most of the respondents using mitigation (62.2% of 148) used a combination of noise making, lighting fires during the night, and launching stones with hand catapults. Other methods included employing someone to guard the fields (16.9% of 148), planting unfavourable crops such as chilli around the farm (10.8%), seeking help from wildlife rangers, who used disturbance shooting (4.7%), placing hives of honeybees Apis mellifera around crop fields (3.4%), and placing oil-smeared cloths attached to ropes around crop fields (2.0%). Those who employed a combination of methods suffered less mean damage (3.30 ± SD 3.84 ha), followed by those who planted chilli around the farm (3.35 ± SD 4.44 ha), used beehives (4.75 ± SD 2.62 ha), employed guards (5.37 ± SD 6.13 ha), used oil-smeared cloths on ropes (6.80 ± SD 2.28 ha) or used disturbance shooting (9.33 ± SD 7.08 ha; F = 2.83, df = 5, P < 0.020).

Discussion

Distance to reserve boundary

Mean crop damage losses and the frequency with which crop damage by elephants was reported were greatest < 1 km from the Rungwa, Kizigo and Muhesi Game Reserves. Other studies have also shown that farms close to protected areas experience more crop damage compared to those further away (Nahonyo, Reference Nahonyo2005; Okello et al., Reference Okello, Manka and D'amour2008; Sarker, Reference Sarker, Gereta and Røskaft2010; Blair & Meredith, Reference Blair and Meredith2017). However, estimates of crop losses caused by elephants can be exaggerated by affected communities (Enukwa, Reference Enukwa2017; Shaffer et al., Reference Shaffer, Khadka, Van den Hoek and Naithani2019). In our study, we diminished this possibility by elaborating the questions to the respondent before we recorded answers. This ensured that respondents understood the questions and provided correct answers, by giving them time to crosscheck their answers. Not all farms close to reserves experience crop losses to elephants, and the frequency of crop losses often varies: not all farms closest to reserve boundaries are damaged (Graham et al., Reference Graham, Notter, Adams, Lee and Ochieng2010; Von Gerhardt et al., Reference Von Gerhardt, Van Niekerk, Kidd, Samways and Hanks2014). Similarly, we found that c. 22% of farmers who had farms < 1 km from a reserve boundary did not experience crop damage by elephants.

Crop damage is only a part of the Tanzania consolation scheme regulation (United Republic of Tanzania, 2011). Crop loss to elephants is not fully compensated, and compensation varies with distance from protected areas; losses to farms within 0.5 km do not receive any compensation. Our findings support our first hypothesis that crop damage incidents increase with decreasing distance of farms to a game reserve boundary.

Season

Respondents indicated that crop damage by elephants was higher during the wet season. Although in the generalized linear model season did not make a significant contribution to the area of crop damaged, this result could have been influenced by interactions of other variables in the model, as the univariate analysis indicated greater average losses of crops in the wet season. Rainfall determines the growth of the farm–bush mosaic, which is attractive to elephants, and rainfall promotes growth of crops, such as maize, which when mature attract elephants (Barnes et al., Reference Barnes, Dubiure, Danquah, Boafo, Nandjui, Hema and Manford2007; Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012). During the dry season there was a lower frequency of crop damage, as we hypothesized, because during these months there is less crop cultivation. However, during the dry season a few crops, such as vegetables and tobacco seedlings, are grown near rivers in the study area. In this season elephants will move outside the reserves to search for water and may cause damage to vegetables grown along the river and at water points (Barnes & Dunn, Reference Barnes and Dunn2002; Sitati et al., Reference Sitati, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005; Barnes et al., Reference Barnes, Dubiure, Danquah, Boafo, Nandjui, Hema and Manford2007; Sitienei et al., Reference Sitienei, Jiwen and Ngene2014).

Immigration status

Our findings indicated that Indigenous respondents were more aware than immigrants of mitigation measures. As envisaged in our third hypothesis, more immigrants than Indigenous respondents experienced crop damage by elephants, mainly because of differences in farming practices, with most immigrants farming near the borders of the game reserves, similar to the findings of research elsewhere (Lyamuya et al., Reference Lyamuya, Masenga, Mbise, Fyumagwa, Mwita and Røskaft2014; Acharya et al., Reference Acharya, Paudel, Neupane and Köhl2016). Indigenous people whose families have resided in the area for several generations are more likely to be aware of local geography, seasonality and elephant dynamics. In our study immigrants, who are from agro-pastoralist groups, cultivated larger farms than Indigenous people, possibly because they had larger households and consequently greater food requirements (Redpath et al., Reference Redpath, Bhatia and Young2015; Acharya et al., Reference Acharya, Paudel, Neupane and Köhl2016).

Types of crops damaged and mitigation methods

Most of the respondents in our study area listed maize as the crop most vulnerable to elephants, probably because maize is the main food crop in this area. During the maturing stage, in the wet season, maize attracts elephants because of its high sugar content (Barnes & Dunn, Reference Barnes and Dunn2002; Gubbi, Reference Gubbi2012). Measures applied by the farmers in our study to deter elephants included simple, affordable methods such as noise making, use of flashlights, setting fire around the fields, and firing stones from hand catapults. Noise making involves hitting tins and drums, yelling, and sometimes whistling, to deter elephants away from the fields (Osborn & Parker, Reference Osborn and Parker2003; Khumalo & Yung, Reference Khumalo and Yung2015). The farmers also noted that the wildlife authorities used disturbance shooting to deter elephants from fields, but rarely destroyed problem elephants. Disturbance shooting, and the destruction of problem elephants have been used by wildlife authorities near protected areas in Kenya to deter elephants from fields (Dublin & Hoare, Reference Dublin and Hoare2004; Hoare, Reference Hoare2015). Respondents in our study area also used chilli to help deter elephants. Compared to crops such as maize and sorghum, chilli is less palatable to elephants and is a cash crop with high economic value (Parker & Osborn, Reference Parker and Osborn2006; Khumalo & Yung, Reference Khumalo and Yung2015). Our respondents also reported the use of beehives. Noise from honeybees is a deterrent to elephants, which upon hearing the sound from disturbed honeybees produce alarm calls that cause members in the group to move away from the source of the sound (King et al., Reference King, Soltis, Douglas-Hamilton, Savage and Vollrath2010). The use of beehive fences, although effective, is potentially limited by lack of funds.

Conclusion

Farmers cultivating crops < 1 km from the nearest boundary of the Rungwa, Kizigo and Muhesi Game Reserves experienced more crop damage by elephants compared to those with farms further away, damage was higher in the wet season when palatable crops are mature, and immigrants to the area, who tend to farm closer to the reserves, suffered greater crop damage by elephants than did Indigenous respondents. Based on our findings, we make four recommendations. Firstly, farmers should be discouraged from planting crops < 1 km from a reserve boundary, in combination with the establishment of a 1 km buffer zone within which only activities such as beekeeping and tree planting are allowed. Secondly, we recommend the use of a combination of mitigation methods, including increased planting of crops that are less palatable to elephants, such as chilli, and the use of honeybee fences around farms. Thirdly, we recommend increasing the amount of compensation available to farmers when they lose crops to elephants, rather than the current situation in which affected farmers are compensated for only a small proportion of the total loss. Fourthly, we recommend education on available mitigation methods, to help farmers living in areas adjacent to the game reserves minimize crop losses to elephants.

Acknowledgements

We thank the Norwegian government and the EU Horizon-2020 financed project under GA 641918 (to AfricanBioServices) for funding the compilation of this research, the Tanzania Wildlife Management Authority and the Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute for granting us access to conduct this research, Patrice Richard for his help in the field, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments.

Author contributions

Study design: WAM, KMH, ER; data collection and analysis: WAM; writing: KMH, ER, WAM.

Conflicts of interest

None.

Ethical standards

This research abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards. A permit to conduct research was obtained from the relevant wildlife authority prior to field work.

Footnotes

*

Also at: AfricanBioServices, Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway

Also at: Tanzania Wildlife Management Authority, Morogoro, Tanzania

Supplementary material for this article is available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S003060531800128X

References

Acharya, K.P., Paudel, P.K., Neupane, P.R. & Köhl, M. (2016) Human–wildlife conflicts in Nepal: patterns of human fatalities and injuries caused by large mammals. PLOS ONE, 11, e0161717.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alcamo, J., Bennett, E. & Assessment, M.E. (2003) Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: a Framework for Assessment. Island Press, Washington, DC, USA.Google Scholar
Barnes, R.F.W. & Dunn, A. (2002) Estimating forest elephant density in Sapo National Park (Liberia) with a rainfall model. African Journal of Ecology, 40, 159163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, R.F.W., Dubiure, U.F., Danquah, E., Boafo, Y., Nandjui, A., Hema, E.M. & Manford, M. (2007) Crop-raiding elephants and the moon. African Journal of Ecology, 45, 112115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barua, M., Bhagwat, S.A. & Jadhav, S. (2013) The hidden dimensions of human–wildlife conflict: health impacts, opportunity and transaction costs. Biological Conservation, 157, 309316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blair, A. & Meredith, T. (2017) Community perception of the real impacts of human–wildlife conflict in Laikipia, Kenya: capturing the relative significance of high-frequency, low-severity events. Oryx, 52, 497507.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chapman, C.A., Van Bavel, B., Boodman, C., Ghai, R.R., Gogarten, J.F., Hartter, J. et al. (2015) Providing health care to improve community perceptions of protected areas. Oryx, 49, 636642.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chase, M.J., Schlossberg, S., Griffin, C.R., Bouché, P.J.C., Djene, S.W., Elkan, P.W. et al. (2016) Continent-wide survey reveals massive decline in African savannah elephants. PeerJ, 4, e2354.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dickman, A.J. (2010) Complexities of conflict: the importance of considering social factors for effectively resolving human–wildlife conflict. Animal Conservation, 13, 458466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickman, A.J. & Hazzah, L. (2016) Money, myths and man-eaters: complexities of human–wildlife conflict. In Problematic Wildlife—a Cross-Disciplinary Approach (ed. Angelici, F.M.), pp. 339356. Springer, New York, USA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dublin, H.T. & Hoare, R.E. (2004) Searching for solutions: the evolution of an integrated approach to understanding and mitigating human–elephant conflict in Africa. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 9, 271278.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enukwa, E.H. (2017) Human–elephant conflict mitigation methods: a review of effectiveness and sustainability. Journal of Wildlife and Biodiversity, 1, 6978.Google Scholar
Fisher, M. (2016) Whose conflict is it anyway? Mobilizing research to save lives. Oryx, 50, 377378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, M.D., Notter, B.M., Adams, W.M., Lee, P.C. & Ochieng, T.N. (2010) Patterns of crop-raiding by elephants, Loxodonta africana, in Laikipia, Kenya, and the management of human–elephant conflict. Systematics and Biodiversity, 8, 435445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gubbi, S. (2012) Patterns and correlates of human–elephant conflict around a south Indian reserve. Biological Conservation, 148, 8895.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hariohay, K.M., Fyumagwa, R.D., Kideghesho, J.R. & Røskaft, E. (2018) Awareness and attitudes of local people toward wildlife conservation in the Rungwa Game Reserve in Central Tanzania. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 23, 503514.Google Scholar
Hariohay, K.M., Ranke, P.S., Fyumagwa, R.D., Kideghesho, J.R. & Røskaft, E. (2019) Drivers of conservation crimes in the Rungwa-Kizigo-Muhesi Game Reserves, Central Tanzania. Global Ecology and Conservation, 17, e00522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, C.M. (1997) Crop-raiding by wild vertebrates: the farmer's perspective in an agricultural community in western Uganda. International Journal of Pest Management, 43, 7784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoare, R. (2015) Lessons from 20 years of human–elephant conflict mitigation in Africa: perspective on human–wildlife conflict. Human Dimensions of Wildlife, 20, 289295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khumalo, K.E. & Yung, L.A. (2015) Women, human–wildlife conflict, and CBNRM: hidden impacts and vulnerabilities in Kwandu Conservancy, Namibia. Conservation and Society, 13, 232243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kikoti, A.P., Griffin, C.R. & Pamphil, L. (2011) Elephant use and conflict leads to Tanzania's first wildlife conservation corridor. Pachyderm, 48, 5766.Google Scholar
King, L.E., Soltis, J., Douglas-Hamilton, I., Savage, A. & Vollrath, F. (2010) Bee threat elicits alarm call in African elephants. PLOS ONE, 5, e10346.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lyamuya, R.D., Masenga, E.H., Mbise, F., Fyumagwa, R.D., Mwita, M. & Røskaft, E. (2014) Human–carnivore conflict over livestock in the eastern part of the Serengeti ecosystem, with a particular focus on the African wild dog Lycaon pictus. Oryx, 48, 378384.Google Scholar
Mace, G.M., Barrett, M., Burgess, N.D., Cornell, S.E., Freeman, R., Grooten, M. & Purvis, A. (2018) Aiming higher to bend the curve of biodiversity loss. Nature Sustainability, 1, 448451.Google Scholar
Mayberry, A.L., Hovorka, A.J. & Evans, K.E. (2017) Well-being impacts of human–elephant conflict in Khumaga, Botswana: exploring visible and hidden dimensions. Conservation and Society, 15, 280291.Google Scholar
Mduma, S.R., Lobora, A.L., Foley, C. & Jones, T. (2010) Tanzania Elephant Management Plan 2010–2015. Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute: Conservation Information and Monitoring Unit, Arusha, Tanzania.Google Scholar
Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism (2011) Rungwa-Kizigo-Muhesi Game Reserves General Management Plan. Government Printers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
Nahonyo, C.L. (2005) Assessment of anti-poaching effort in Ruaha National Park, Tanzania. Tanzania Journal of Science, 31, 1322.Google Scholar
Okello, M.M., Manka, S.G. & D'amour, D.E. (2008) The relative importance of large mammal species for tourism in Amboseli National Park, Kenya. Tourism Management, 29, 751760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osborn, F.V. & Parker, G.E. (2003) Towards an integrated approach for reducing the conflict between elephants and people: a review of current research. Oryx, 37, 8084.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parker, G.E. & Osborn, F.V. (2006) Investigating the potential for chilli Capsicum spp. to reduce human–wildlife conflict in Zimbabwe. Oryx, 40, 343346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Redpath, S., Bhatia, S. & Young, J. (2015) Tilting at wildlife: reconsidering human–wildlife conflict. Oryx, 49, 222225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Røskaft, E., Larsen, T., Mojaphoko, R., Sarker, A.H.M.R. & Jackson, C. (2015) Human dimensions of elephant ecology. In Elephants and Savanna Woodland Ecosystems: a Study From Chobe National Park, Botswana, Vol. 14 (eds Skarpe, C., Du Toit, J.T. & Moe, S.R.), pp. 271288. Wiley Blackwell, Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Sarker, A.H.M.R. (2010) Human–wildlife conflict: a comparison between Asia and Africa with special reference to elephants. In Conservation of Natural Resources: Some African & Asian Examples (eds Gereta, E. & Røskaft, E.), pp. 186210. Tapir Academic Press, Trondheim, Norway.Google Scholar
Shaffer, L.J., Khadka, K.K., Van den Hoek, J. & Naithani, K.J. (2019) Human–elephant conflict: a review of current management strategies and future directions. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 6, 235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sitati, N.W., Walpole, M.J. & Leader-Williams, N. (2005) Factors affecting susceptibility of farms to crop raiding by African elephants: using a predictive model to mitigate conflict. Journal of Applied Ecology, 42, 11751182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sitienei, A.J., Jiwen, G. & Ngene, S.M. (2014) Assessing the cost of living with elephants (Loxodonta africana) in areas adjacent to Meru National Park, Kenya. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 60, 323330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stearns, B.P. & Stearns, S.C. (2010) Still watching, from the edge of extinction. BioScience, 60, 141146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute (2015) Aerial Census of Large Animals in the Ruaha-Rungwa Ecosystem, Dry Season, Population Status of African Elephant. Government of Tanzania, Ausha, Tanzania.Google Scholar
United Republic of Tanzania (2009) Wildlife Conservation Act No 5 of 2009. Government Printers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
United Republic of Tanzania (2011) The Wildlife Conservation (Dangerous Animals Damage Consolation) Regulations. Government of Tanzania, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
United Republic of Tanzania (2013) Population and Housing Census: Population Distribution by Administrative Areas. Government Printers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
United Republic of Tanzania (2017) Tanzania Total Population by District-Regions 2016–2017: Sub-Divisional Population Projection for Year 2016, 2017 Based on 2012 Population and Housing Census. Government printers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
United Republic of Tanzania (2018) The Wildlife Conservation (Wildlife Corridors, Dispersal Areas, Buffer Zones and Migratory Routes) Regulations, 2018. Government Printers, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.Google Scholar
Von Gerhardt, K., Van Niekerk, A., Kidd, M., Samways, M. & Hanks, J. (2014) The role of elephant Loxodonta africana pathways as a spatial variable in crop-raiding location. Oryx, 48, 436444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Western, D., Waithaka, J. & Kamanga, J. (2015) Finding space for wildlife beyond National Parks and reducing conflicts through community-based conservation: the Kenya experience. Parks, 21, 5262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Locations of the 210 households (circles) in the seven villages (30 households in each) in which we conducted the questionnaire survey.

Figure 1

Table 1 Crop damage reported by 210 respondents, by village, nearest distance to game reserve boundary, season, immigration status, and water sources shared with elephants Loxodonta africana, with Pearson χ2 test for differences within each of the four variables.

Figure 2

Table 2 Estimated mean area of crops damaged by elephants reported by the 109 households that indicated crop damage was a major problem, by village, nearest distance to reserve boundary, season, immigration status, farm size and water sources shared with elephants, with F test for differences within each of the four variables.

Figure 3

Table 3 Generalized linear model with crop damage area as the dependent variable and six independent variables: village, distance of farm to nearest reserve boundary, season, immigration status, farm size, and water sources shared with elephants.

Supplementary material: File

Hariohay et al. supplementary material

Hariohay et al. supplementary material

Download Hariohay et al. supplementary material(File)
File 88.7 KB