London (UK): According to recent research, which provides the most thorough investigation of Asian elephant mobility and habitat preference to the date, elephants prefer environments outside of protected areas rather than inside them. The results are presented in the Journal of Applied Ecology of the British Ecological Society.
An international team of researchers tracked more than 600,000 GPS locations while analysing the movement and habitat preferences of 102 Asian elephants in Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo. They discovered that most elephants spend more than half of their time outdoors, favouring minimally damaged forests and regrowth regions.
Protected areas continued to play a significant influence, with the elephants' top preference for locations being those that were three kilometres or less from protected area boundaries. The predilection for damaged forests is assumed to be connected to dietary preferences. Elephants enjoy eating grasses, bamboo, palms and quickly-growing trees, all of which are rather scarce in old-growth forests but are widespread in disturbed areas.
One of the study's primary authors, Dr Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz, from Malaysia's Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden and the University of Nottingham, said, "Our results demonstrate that protected areas are very essential, but not sufficient as an overall approach for Asian elephant conservation. "Given their preference for habitats outside the protected areas, elephants will inevitably come into conflict with people. This highlights the importance of promoting human-elephant coexistence around protected areas."
The authors explicitly state that their findings do not lessen the significance of protected areas, which are a vital component of international conservation policies. The other lead author, Dr Benoit Goossens from Cardiff University and the Danau Girang Field Centre added: "We think protected areas are the best instrument for biodiversity protection overall. Protected areas serve as the main locations for the long-term protection and conservation of Asian elephants.
"Our results show that elephant conservation strategies need to be realistic and acknowledge the nuances of elephant habitat needs and preferences, integrating holistic human-elephant coexistence approaches outside protected areas." The authors offer three important suggestions for Asian elephant conservation in light of their findings:
1.Be sure to include sizable protected areas as well as key sites where elephants can find refuge.