Human-elephant Conflicts in Changed Landscapes of South West Bengal , India

Human-elephant Conflicts in Changed Landscapes of South West Bengal , India

Authors

  •   Anil Kumar Singh
  •   Rina R. Singh
  •   Sushant Chowdhury

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2002/v128i10/2649

Abstract

The human-elephant conflict study conducted between 1995 to 1997 records occurrence of 62 elephants in South West Bengal , inhibiting 3 ,368 km2 , in four localized sub.groups (n=26) and the group (n=36) that seasonally migrates from adjoining Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary , Bihar. Occurrence of intense crop depredation was only 5.5% of the total cultivated area available within the movement range of elephant. Landscape mosaic with cropland to forest ratios of 1.2:1 respectively had high depredation. Intensity of crop damage was higher between Sept. to Dec. (51.8%) followed by Jan. to Apr. (33.6%) , and May to Aug. (14.5%). The estimated crop loss was Rs. 3.2 crores. On an annual basis 13 people are being killed most of which occurred between Jan. to Apr. (48.52%) in post paddy season. Adult males in localized sub.groups were responsible for most (72%) of the human kills. Population management of these elephants through translocation or removal must be seen and integrated with the overall national planning for elephant management.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Anil Kumar Singh

Rina R. Singh

Sushant Chowdhury

Published

2002-10-01

How to Cite

Singh, A. K., Singh, R. R., & Chowdhury, S. (2002). Human-elephant Conflicts in Changed Landscapes of South West Bengal , India. Indian Forester, 128(10), 1119–1132. https://doi.org/10.36808/if/2002/v128i10/2649
Loading...