Emergence of a Resident Asian Elephant Population in Himachal Pradesh: Assessing Possibilities and Challenges in a Non-traditional Range

Emergence of a Resident Asian Elephant Population in Himachal Pradesh: Assessing Possibilities and Challenges in a Non-traditional Range

Authors

  •   Ramesh K. Pandey   Project Elephant, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Government of India, New Delhi
  •   Aishwarya Raj   Paonta Sahib Forest Division, Himachal Pradesh Forest Department, Sirmaur
  •   Aditya Sharma   Paonta Sahib Forest Division, Himachal Pradesh Forest Department, Sirmaur

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2025/v151i8/170891

Keywords:

Asian Elephant, Himachal Pradesh, Human-elephant conflict, Shiwalik range, Range expansion.

Abstract

The State of Himachal Pradesh is situated in Northern Himalayan landscape of India. Sporadic annual movement of elephants has been reported historically from Rajaji National Park, Uttarakhand to Col. Sherjung National Park, contiguous to Paonta Sahib in Himachal and adjoining Kalesar National Park, Haryana. Presence of resident population in this area however is a recent phenomenon since the last few years. Presently, a resident population of 14-16 Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) has established in Sal forests of Paonta Sahib Forest Division, in a non-traditional range, highlighting adaptability to fragmented landscapes. This has enhanced cases of human elephant conflict (HEC) with increased crop raid, damage and human fatality. Efforts have been made by Forest Department with financial assistance under Project Elephant in taking the conversation from conflict to coexistence. The article offers a case study for managing small, isolated herds to balance conservation and coexistence in a human-dominated landscape.

References

Acharya K.P., Paudel P.K., Neupane P.R. and Köhl M. (2016). Human-wildlife conflicts in Nepal: Pattern of human fatalities and injuries caused by large mammals. PLoS One, 11: e0161717.

Arjunan M., Holmes C., Puyravaud J.P. and Davidar P. (2006). Do developmental initiatives influence local attitudes toward conservation? A case study from the Kalakad-Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve, India. Journal of Environmental Management, 79: 188-197.

Fernando P. and Pastorini J. (2011). Range-wide status of Asian elephants. Gajah, 35: 15-20.

Goswami V.R. and Vasudev D. (2017). Triage of conservation needs: The juxtaposition of conflict mitigation and connectivity considerations in heterogeneous, human-dominated landscapes. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 4: 144.

Johnsingh A.J.T. (1990). Conservation and management of elephants in northwest India. Biological Conservation, 51: 349-367.

Menon V., Tiwari S.K., Ramkumar K., Kyarong S., Ganguly U. and Sukumar R. (2017). Right of Passage: Elephant corridors of India. 2nd edition Conservation Reference Series No. 3. Wildlife Trust of India, New Delhi.

Minhui Shi, Yinping Tian, Yongjing Tang, Haimeng Li, Jishan Wang, Yue Ma, Xin Liu, Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz, Fei Chen, Tianming Lan (2025). Population genetics reveal potential threats from low maternal genetic diversity in wild Asian elephants in China. Global Ecology and Conservation, 58: 2025, e03503, ISSN 2351-9894

MoEFCC (2023). Status of elephants in India. Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Government of India.

Pandey R.K., Yadav S.P., Selvan K.M., Natarajan L. and Nigam P. (2024). Elephant conservation in India: Striking a balance between coexistence and conflicts. Integrative Conservation, 3: 1-11.

Pearce J. and Ferrier S. (2000). Evaluating the predictive performance of habitat models developed using logistic regression. Ecological Modelling, 133(3): 225-245. DOI: 10.1016/S0304-3800(00)00322-7

Phillips S.J., Anderson R.P. and Schapire R.E. (2006). Maximum entropy modeling of species geographic distributions. Ecological Modelling, 190: 231–259. DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2005.03.026

Project Elephant, MoEF&CC (2023), Elephant Corridors of India 2023.

Raj A. (2023). Working Plan for the Forests of Paonta Sahib Forest Division for the period 2023-24 to 2032-33

Himachal Pradesh Raj A. (2025). Draft Zonal Master Plan for Eco Sensitive Zone of Col. Sherjung National Park, Paonta Sahib Forest Division, Government of Himachal Pradesh.

Rangarajan M., Desai A., Sukumar R., Easa P.S., Menon V., Vincent S., Ganguly S., Talukdar B.K., Singh B., Mudappa D., Chowdhary S. and AN Prasad A.N. (2010). Gajah. Securing the Future for Elephants in India. The Report of the Elephant Task Force, Ministry of Environment and Forests. August 31, 2010. New Delhi: Ministry of Environment and Forests,2010. http://www.environmentandsociety.org/node/2697.

Sharma A. (2024). Habitat Suitability for Elephas maximus in Paonta Sahib Forest Division, HP. Central Academy for State Forest Service (CASFOS), Dehradun.

Sharma R. (2020). Ecology and conservation of elephants in Uttarakhand. Wildlife Institute of India.

Sukumar R. (1990). Ecology of the Asian Elephant in Southern India. II. feeding habits and crop raiding patterns. J. Trop. Ecol., 6: 33–53 doi: 10.1017/S0266467400004004

Usongo L. and Nkanje B.T. (2004). Participatory approaches towards forest conservation: The case of Lobéké National Park, South east Cameroon. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology, 11(2): 119–127.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Aishwarya Raj, Paonta Sahib Forest Division, Himachal Pradesh Forest Department, Sirmaur

Deputy Conservator of Forests, Paonta Sahib Forest Division, Himachal Pradesh Forest Department, Sirmaur, India

Published

2025-08-26

How to Cite

Pandey, R. K., Raj, A., & Sharma, A. (2025). Emergence of a Resident Asian Elephant Population in Himachal Pradesh: Assessing Possibilities and Challenges in a Non-traditional Range. Indian Forester, 151(8), 707‐714. https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2025/v151i8/170891

Issue

Section

Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Loading...