Date: August 31, 2016
Source: PeerJ
Researchers have announced the
results of the $7 million, three-year Great Elephant Census, the first-ever
pan-African survey of savanna elephants using standardized data collection and
validation methods. Managed by Elephants Without Borders (EWB,) the immense
project's report confirms substantial declines in elephant numbers over just
the last decade. The researchers report that the current rate of species
decline is 8 percent per year, primarily due to poaching.
The Pan-African survey shows the
estimated savannah elephant population to be 352,271 within the 18 countries
surveyed to-date, representing at least 93 percent of savannah elephants in
these countries. For savannah elephant populations in 15 of the GEC countries,
for which repeat counts were available, populations declined by 30 percent
between 2007 and 2014. 84 percent of the population surveyed was sighted in
legally protected areas compared to 16 percent in unprotected areas. However,
large numbers of carcasses were observed in many protected areas indicating that
elephants are struggling both within and outside of parks. Experts say the
ivory trade and poaching pose serious threats and there is now a risk that
savannah elephants could disappear from parts of Africa. The scientific report
of the GEC findings was published on August 31, in the peer-reviewed open
access journal PeerJ.
The GEC team used the most
accurate, up-to-date counting and statistical methods to analyze data,
accurately determining the number and distribution of the great majority of
African savanna elephants and this now provides a baseline on a continental
scale for future surveys and trend analyses, that wildlife ecologists will be
able to use to coordinate conservation efforts.
Overall, 90 scientists, six
non-governmental organization partners, and two advisory partners, managed by a
team at Paul Allen's Vulcan Inc. collaborated in the work. These included the
organizations Elephants Without Borders, the Wildlife Conservation Society, the
Nature Conservancy, Frankfurt Zoological Society, African Parks Network and the
advisory groups Save the Elephants and the International Union for Conservation
of Nature's African Elephant Specialist Group. The effort was conducted which
partnered with in country park biologists, rangers, and game wardens.
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