1. Human Conflict Elephants are usually gentle giants. People head to the savannas and zoos yearly to see them. However, sometimes they conflict with humans, such as farmers.A herd of elephants ...
Photograph by Chad Keates Elephants follow these waterways, building an ecosystem and keeping it balanced. But too many elephants in one place means they’re no longer builders, but bulldozers ...
has remarkably identified and named almost all 1,500 elephants in the Amboseli Ecosystem in Kenya. The first family we started trying to follow were called the ‘FBs’, but after a week of ...
But why move these giants in the first place? The answer is simple: the Venetia Limpopo Nature Reserve has too many elephants for its ecosystem to support, and a 15-year civil war left Mozambique ...
WWF Tanzania Country Office has applauded the wildlife conservation and anti-poaching efforts in the country following a report revealing a stability in the elephant numbers in the past four years in ...
I write on innovation, edtech ecosystems and entrepreneurial mindset ... Concerns about privacy related to these technology solutions is the “elephant in the room.” Each time an edtech ...
Elephants have a remarkable ability to transform ... It puts a lot of pressure on water resources and freshwater ecosystems. It could mean that wetlands hold water for a shorter time in the ...
We’ve supported the collaring of elephants in the Mara Ecosystem in collaboration with the Mara Elephant Project, Save the Elephants and the Kenya Wildlife Service. The collars include GPS/GSM ...
40 elephants were reportedly poached this year. In Maasai Mara ecosystem, KWS reported that 61 elephants died this year. 23 of them are said to have died of natural causes, 10 due to human ...
and reducing the impact of illegal wildlife trade and extractive industries on the ecosystem.” Banner image: Elephant density in some parks in Cameroon has increased sharply. Image courtesy by WWF.