53 years of survey data confirm African elephant decline
Colorado State University, Phys.org
November 11, 2024
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https://phys.org/news/2024-11-years-survey-african-elephant-decline.html
for photos.
Habitat loss and poaching have driven dramatic declines in African
elephants, but it is challenging to measure their numbers and monitor
changes across the entire continent. A new study has analyzed 53 years of
population survey data and found large-scale declines in most populations
of both species of African elephants.
From 1964–2016, forest elephant populations decreased on average by 90%,
and savanna elephant populations fell on average by 70%. In combination,
populations declined by 77% on average. The study compiled survey data from
475 sites in 37 countries, making it the most comprehensive assessment of
African elephants to date.
Declines were not uniform across the continent, with some populations
disappearing completely and others showing rapid growth. Colorado State
University Professor George Wittemyer, one of the architects of the study
and chair of the scientific board of Save the Elephants, said that
identifying success stories where elephant populations are stable or
increasing could help with their conservation.
"The context and the solutions at different sites can be quite different,
but there are examples where people are effectively managing and protecting
these populations," Wittemyer said. "It helps to have a contextually
relevant model for elephant conservation, and we've got that in a lot of
different places."
The study, "Survey based inference of continental African elephant
decline," published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
modeled site-level elephant density rather than numbers because the survey
area was not constant over time for most survey sites. A clear trend toward
smaller populations emerged.
"This paper shows the scale of the declines and how widespread they are
across the continent," Wittemyer said. "It shines a light on how quickly
even something as big and noticeable as elephants can just disappear."
Not Simple Arithmetic
Elephants may be big and noticeable, but counting them is complicated and
resource intensive. Surveys of savanna elephants are done by spotters in
planes, and forest elephants must be counted on foot. Drones aren't yet
capable of the long flights over remote areas necessary to survey
elephants, and processing drone imagery is also resource intensive.
Africa is more than three times the size of the United States, and each
African country has its own wildlife management policies and political
system. Some places survey regularly, and others not at all. Existing
surveys were conducted through careful logistical planning and resource
investment.
"We were really happy to bring all of that data together and leverage it,
given the effort and care taken to collect it," Wittemyer said.
As elephant populations declined, some protected spaces were condensed and
survey borders changed. To compensate for shrinking survey areas and gaps
in data, the study authors had to use places with good information to
estimate population change for nearby places with less information. They
looked at site-based trends to get a picture of the overall distribution of
trends.
"The strength of our approach is that we were able to infer these trends,
even in places where the data were extremely poor, in a way that allowed
the results from each survey site to be compared," said co-author Charles
Edwards, a research scientist with CEscape consultancy services.
"Understanding how and where trends are different across the range of a
species is arguably more important for their conservation than an overall
change in abundance, which may only reflect change in the largest
populations."
"It's not a metric of the number of elephants left on the continent,"
Wittemyer added. "It's an assessment of how each population is doing, and
they're generally not doing great."
Shifting Distribution
The study examined how African elephants fared by species and region. In
the war-torn Sahel region of northern Africa, elephant populations have
been decimated. Eastern and central Africa generally saw declines from
ivory poaching as well as from human population growth and wilderness
conversion crowding out elephants.
However, elephants are thriving in parts of southern Africa, particularly
in Botswana, where populations have been protected and sustainably managed.
The authors said that the study's comprehensive assessment of the status of
African elephants is fundamental to management decisions like knowing where
to invest limited funding and capabilities to best protect elephants.
"The overall story is one of decline, but we're focusing on long-term
stability of the species," Wittemyer said. "I think we can do that in a
bunch of places, but not all places."
Co-authors of the study are Kathleen Gobush (University of Washington),
Fiona Maisels (Wildlife Conservation Society and University of Stirling),
Dave Balfour (Nelson Mandela University) and Russell Taylor (WWF Namibia).
https://phys.org/news/2024-11-years-survey-african-elephant-decline.html