Advertisement
Increasing mining activities, rampant urbanisation, agriculture and highway construction have resulted in fragmentation of traditional elephant corridors in the state leading to increased human-animal conflict, the official said.
”Human-animal conflicts have been a huge concern for Jharkhand in the last 5 to 10 years mainly on account of habitat fragmentation, It is not only the corridor but the whole habitat which has been impacted as such and the areas where elephant herds used to reside for many months have gradually been fragmented due to development and mining operations… ”There is an expansion of agriculture, social economic pressures are there on the habitat and that is why these elephants have to move from one area to another area and in that process, there is a conflict,” Principal Chief Conservator of Forests, Sanjay Srivastava told PTI in an interview.
Jharkhand is home to about 650 elephants and on an average about 80 lives are lost per annum due to man-elephant conflict.
Related Articles
Advertisement
”The elephants prefer bamboo and we are planting these in areas with a strong likelihood of elephant herds. About 1,000 check dams are being constructed in those areas in this financial year in addition to plantations of over three lakh bamboo plants. We are trying to provide salt lick in deep forest areas which attract elephants. ”We would be spending about Rs 10 crore typically for these small initiatives this fiscal to make improvements in the elephant habitat areas and this amount can go up depending on the requirements and available funds,” Srivastava told PTI.
Asked about the restoration of their traditional corridors, the PCCF said as per the 2011 Gazetteer, elephants used to traditionally migrate from the Dalma Wildlife Sanctuary in Jharkhand to neighbouring areas of West Bengal – Purulia, Bankura, West Medinipur, etc but over a period of time there were encroachments leading to man-animal conflict.
Asked about reports of West Bengal digging trenches to prevent Jharkhand elephants from entering their areas, Srivastava said the West Bengal government has dug trenches which is quite long and block the traditional migratory path and at times unable to proceed on their path the irritated elephants come back to areas like Chakulia and Ghatshila resulting in conflicts.
Asked whether the issue was taken up with the West Bengal government, he said: ”About four months back there was an inter-state coordination meeting which was held in Kolkata where officers from Odisha, Jharkhand and West Bengal were invited. The officials from Jharkhand expressed their concerns about the artificial barriers created…I would say that the government of West Bengal is quite sensitised about these issues… I am sure they would also get sensitized to our problem as well and something good will come up in the near future.” He said the nature of the elephant is such that they go from 20 km to 100 km in 24 hours and require 250 kg to 300 kg of food per day in addition to large quantities of water in view of their massive body structure.
”Digging trenches to save lives in West Bengal is a huge challenge for us and I am hopeful of a solution soon,” he said.
Srivastava also emphasised that though it is heartening to note that forest cover has been continuously increasing in Jharkhand since 2000 there is a need to improve the quality of the forest as there is pressure on it by the local community.’ According to the India State of Forest Report (ISFR), Jharkhand’s forest cover has increased by 243 square kilometres — from 23,478 sqkm in 2015 to 23,716 sqkm in 2021.
Man-elephant conflict has claimed over 1,500 lives since the creation of Jharkhand in 2000, officials said.
Man-elephant conflicts have been on the rise in Jharkhand with reports revealing that 133 people have died in jumbo attacks in 2021-22, a steep climb from 84 in 2020-21.