Elephant facts

Off to Kisangani

Monday, March 21st, 2011

It’s been a fortunate few days. We arrived in Kinshasa on Monday exhausted from 36 hours of transit and found the Congo just as hot as we left it two years ago. On Tuesday morning, we met with Dr. Terese Hart, a 30-year veteran of conservation in the DRC. Terese first came to the country as a Peace Corp volunteer in 1974. She‚Äôs now in her tenth year studying bonobos, an ape found only in the DRC, in a 25,000-square mile block of forest known as TL2. The region’s an elephant sanctuary on paper but animals are disappearing there faster than ever.

“Research here leads to advocacy because it’s all being destroyed,” says Hart.

To that end, she brought bad news. TL2, one of the four conservation areas we hoped to sample, has come under threat of a notoriously violent poacher and rapist: Colonel Toms. A decade earlier, Toms was sentenced to 20 years in a maximum-security prison for crimes against humanity. He recently escaped and restarted his poaching operations in TL2. MONUC, the UN’s DRC specific security force, has made a commitment to apprehend the Colonel, but no action has been taken yet. It’s like the Wild West. Stability means a calm between warring bandits and rebel groups.

“In many cases, elephant are poached for their meat. Their ivory is sold to buy weapons,” says Hart.

She had come to Kinshasa from her home in Kisangani in part, to speak with the Administrative General of the ICCN, the DRC’s equivalent of a wildlife management agency. She wanted to garner support from the government to get Colonel Toms re-arrested. She also had work to do to make TL2′s designation as a National Park official. Depending on when President Kabila signs the proposition into law, it may happen as soon as this year. Lucky for us, we needed Cosma Wilungula Balongelwa’s approval to make the Elephant Ivory Project a success; and Terese‚Äôs French is better than ours.

With Balongelwa’s blessing, we’re heading some 500 miles up the Congo River to Kisangani tomorrow morning. Terese and her husband John, a researcher in Kisangani for three decades, will decide if the bandit situation is safe enough for Andy and I to go via motorbike 225 miles south to TL2. If it isn’t, we’ll head north to Maiko National Park, another un-sampled area. For Dr. Samual Wasser, the director of the University of Washington’s Center for Conservation Biology and the reason we’re here, TL2 may be the most important of the remaining un-sampled regions in the DRC.

Wasser has scat samples from elephants across most of Africa, and in the regions he doesn’t, he’s able to estimate the genetics of un-sampled populations using a technique known as genetic smoothing. The technique’s success depends upon the distribution of populations Wasser has reference samples from. Elephants that live close together share more genes.

“I have samples from elephants in Salongo National Park in western DRC and Virunga National Park in the east.” says Wasser. The parks are 600 miles apart. TL2 sits right between them. “If I can get samples from TL2, I can estimate with much greater accuracy the genetics of elephants all across the DRC.”

Which could translate into less poaching. If Terese and John decide it’s safe enough to head into the bush, we’ll spend three weeks in TL2 collecting 30 samples for 30 different elephant groups. We’re boarding a plane for Kisangani this morning and will let you if we’re going in as soon as we find out. Huge thanks to the Center for Conservation Biology, the Lukuru Foundation, and the Harts. As always, follow our progress on the Spot Messenger Maphere at the Elephant Ivory Project and our tweets at @EPfilmsTV and @amaser.

–Trip Jenning and Kyle Dickman

Where In Africa Do Elephants Live?

Thursday, October 21st, 2010

Range of African elephants. Courtesy Defenders of Wildlife.

African savannah elephants are found in savannah zones in 37 countries south of the Sahara Desert. African forest elephants inhabit the dense rain forests of west and central Africa. The continent’s northernmost elephants are found in Mali’s Sahel desert. The small, nomadic herd of Mali elephants migrates in a circular route through the desert in search of water.

The availability of food and water are the most important natural factors in determining the distribution of elephants. Often they migrate from a permanent water source at the start of the rainy season and return when the water holes begin to dry up at the beginning of the dry season. Consequently, home ranges have been measured as large as 3,120 square kilometers.

In the last 35 years, elephants have been extirpated from large swaths of central African savannah. Population trends assessed from aerial censuses of five of the most protected Central African savannah national parks (in Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, Chad and Sudan) demonstrate elephant declines in excess of 85% over the past 35 years. The same is true for Africa’s rainforest.

Overexploitation of elephants for their ivory has been a major factor in the massive population declines over the past two hundred years.

Daily Dose of Cuteness: Baby Elephant Photo Gallery

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

Baby elephants weigh between 2oo to 250 pounds when they are born.

These photos will make just about anyone care about saving elephants…

Photos: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

The Great Migration of Mali’s African Elephants

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

All African elephants migrate in search of food, water and habitat. Elephants in Mali cover more than 300 miles in 8 months…

From National Geographic Channel:

Mali’s African elephants follow a counter-clockwise oval route dotted with water holes from the Niger River in the north to the Burkina Faso border in the south. They cover as many as 35 miles in a day, hiding in forests during daylight hours and emerging in darkness. Humans are their biggest threat.

Learn more about Mali’s elephants by tuning in to the National Geographic Channel this November for its Great Migrations series.

And the next time you migrate to the fridge for some food, or the tap for water, think about how little you have to do to get there. Then think of an elephant. And save one.

Elephants Talk

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Did you know that elephants talk? Check out this video from the BBC, which takes a look at the sounds elephants make — too low for human ears to pick up — to communicate. These low frequency sounds travel several kilometers to spread information throughout the rainforest to other elephants in the area, in fact they’re the main way that these elephants can socialize and keep in touch.

Image: WWF