Six Yankari elephants get satellite collars to boost protection

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Conservation experts in Yankari Game Reserve, have fitted six elephants with GPS/Satellite Collars to help provide real-time tracking of elephant herds.

The move is aimed at consolidating on the anti-poaching success achieved in the game reserve over the years.

According to the Country Director, Nigeria Programme, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), Andrew Dunn, the device will allow ranger teams to shadow the elephants at all times and alert the reserve manager whenever elephants are in danger or stray outside the reserve.

READ ALSO: WCS celebrates four years of zero elephant poaching in Yankari

“Since 2014 Yankari Game Reserve in Bauchi State contains Nigeria’s largest elephant population, currently estimated at around 100 and has been co-managed through a partnership agreement between WCS and Bauchi State Government, with funding support from US Fish and Wildlife Service, Elephant Crisis Fund and the Wildlife Conservation Society,” Dunn said in a statement at the weekend.


Highlighting the success of conservationists in the region, Dunn noted that with the focused law enforcement efforts and community engagement programmes, no elephant has been killed in Yankari since 2015, bringing previously high poaching levels down to a very low level over the past four years, with zero poaching incidences detected.

“Once widespread across Nigeria including rainforest and savanna, elephants are now restricted to a few protected areas in the country as elephants are threatened by habitat loss, human-elephant conflict and particularly by the illegal ivory trade. Elephants have been extensively persecuted in Nigeria for their ivory tusks for many years, highly-prized for traditional purposes and to supply the lucrative export market to Asia,” he said in the statement.

READ ALSO: Vietnam, Hong Kong seize 13,300kg ivory, others from Nigeria


Emphasizing the importance of fitting collars on elephants, the Regional Director of WCS’s Sudano-Sahel Programme, Dr. Paul Elkan said “Real-time monitoring of elephant populations is essential for their protection by providing location data which is used to optimize deployment of anti-poaching and other wildlife protection interventions and also to help improve efforts to reduce elephant human conflict with neighboring communities.”

He added that at various protected area landscape sites across Africa where WCS is engaged in management partnerships with Governments and local communities, they have employed use of GPS/satellite collars, combined with ground based anti poaching patrols, aerial monitoring, and real time law enforcement management to secure elephant populations.

For WCS Landscape Director in Yankari Game Reserve and Resort, Nachamada Geoffrey, “the use of satellite collars has also allowed us to react more quickly whenever elephants stray outside the reserve, and has helped reduce levels of crop damage and human-elephant conflict.

We manage the information on elephant locations with strict confidentiality to ensure their safety at all times.”

Also commenting, the Chief Veterinarian on the project, Dr Richard Harvey disclosed that “the elephants are in good condition, with animals of various ages and plenty of juveniles and calves. The herd is reproducing well, which is great news for the future of elephants, and for the Yankari ecosystem overall.”

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