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Conservation organization purchases vital wildlife corridor for elephants in India
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
January 11, 2010



On Christmas Eve, the Wildlife Trust of India (WTI) and the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) completed a transaction to purchase an important wildlie corridor used by over a thousand Asian elephants (Elephas maximus). The 25.4 acre Kollegal Elephant Corridor was under private ownership, but may now be incorporated into adjacent Biligiri Ranganswamy Temple Wildlife Sanctuary.

"Purchasing corridor land for securement is a very good initiative to reestablish the habitat and remove impediments to elephant movement. Generally, these kind of initiatives are easier with involvement of NGOs rather than government doing it alone. This was a very noble work by WTI and I hope that more elephant corridors are secured similarly to ensure long-term conservation of elephants," said Biswajit Misra, Deputy Conservator of Forests in Chamrajnagar.

Misra added that the corridor will require substantial change to become elephant-friendly, including filling elephant-proof trenches (already partially completed) and reforestation with native species.

The Kollegal Elephant Corridor was identified in WTI's publication, Right of Passage: Elephant Corridors of India as one of 88 critical spaces for elephants on the moves.

Head of WTI's National Elephant Corridor project, Dr. Sandeep Kumar Tiwari, said in a press release that "WTI along with its supporters have been working with state Forest Departments and local communities to secure these corridors to facilitate long-term conservation of the threatened Asian elephant in India […] This corridor provides a safe passage for more than a thousand elephants among other wild animals in this landscape, and will undoubtedly help minimize human-elephant conflicts."

The Asian elephant is listed as Endangered by the IUCN Red List. The population of Asian elephants is estimated to have plummeted by 50 percent in 75 years. The species is threatened by habitat loss, deforestation, poaching, and increasing human-elephant conflict.







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CITATION:
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com (January 11, 2010). Conservation organization purchases vital wildlife corridor for elephants in India. http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0111-hance_elecorridor.html


Tags:
elephants mammals endangered species animals wildlife migration India saving species from extinction in-situ conservation conservation jeremy hance green environment asia Rainforest deforestation conservation finance deforestation forests happy-upbeat environmental protected areas rainforest rainforest animals rainforest destruction rainforest conservation wildlife trade

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