Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 lockdown has helped reduce the death toll from clashes between elephants and humans, conservationists have said.
A record 405 elephants were killed by humans in the country last year, up from about 360 in 2018.
A total of 121 people were killed by elephants, up from 96 the year before, government data showed.
Photo: AFP
“We can say that the human-elephant conflict eased during curfews, but this is a temporary situation,” Jayantha Jayewardene, a leading international expert on elephants, said ahead of World Elephant Day yesterday. “Farmers will start defending their crops and the killings will resume.”
Most of the killed elephants are shot dead or poisoned by farmers trying to keep them off their land. The animals are considered sacred in the majority-Buddhist island and are protected, but prosecutions are rare.
Most of the humans are killed by elephants who have seen their habitat drastically reduced, rampaging in villages looking for food.
Sumith Pilapitiya, a conservationist and former director-general of the government’s wildlife department, estimated that the number of elephant deaths decreased by 40 percent during the COVID-19 lockdown, which started in March and officially ended in June.
Pilapitiya said an average of 240 elephants were killed annually from 2010 to 2017, and the rate had since accelerated.
“The Asian elephant is classified as ‘endangered,’ so we cannot afford to lose elephants at that rate,” Pilapitiya told reporters.
He expressed hope that a “significant reduction” during the shutdown — which included nationwide stay-at-home orders, with people only allowed out to buy essentials — would bring down the overall toll for the year.
Sri Lanka’s elephant population has declined to about 7,000, according to the latest census, down from 12,000 in the early 1900s.
Pilapitiya said that a new panel of experts on measures to reduce human-elephant conflicts in the nation would have its first meeting yesterday.
“This may be an auspicious beginning and hopefully the government will implement the recommendations of this committee,” he said.
During the shutdown, Pilapitiya accompanied wildlife trackers who reported spotting baby elephant twins at the Minneriya sanctuary northeast of Colombo, the first pair seen in the wild in Sri Lanka and a rare sight anywhere.
However, the shutdown of wildlife parks during the pandemic saw an increase in poaching and illegal hunting of all wild animals, prompting the government to order a crackdown last month.
Environmental lawyer Jagath Gunawardena said law enforcement authorities were preoccupied with the coronavirus, which made poaching easier.
“Incidents of elephant-human clashes were few, but there was an increase in killing animals for their flesh,” he said.
While the lockdown officially ended on June 28, Sri Lanka’s borders remain closed to foreign tourists. That has badly hit some residents who rely on the elephants for their income.
The Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage closed during the lockdown, fearing that the animals might contract the virus.
It opened again last month, but its 84 elephants are mostly undisturbed by visitors.
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