Man animal conflict
What is Man-Animal Conflict (MAC)?
It refers to the negative interactions between people and wild animals,
with consequences for both people and their resources and wildlife and their
habitats (IUCN 2020).
- Over
2,000 people in India were killed by elephants while tigers claimed over
200 lives in the last five years, according to data provided by the
government.
Common Reasons:
- Competition
for shared natural resources between people and wildlife
- Human
population growth and the transformation of land use.
- shrinking
forest cover, poaching, rapid and unplanned urbanization
- electrification
penetrating into forest areas
- increasing
road density
- destruction
of natural animal corridors
- agricultural
expansion and cultivation up to forest boundaries.
Consequences of MAC:
- Influences
food security of people and the well-being of both people and animals.
- serious
global threat to sustainable development and conservation
in urban and rural landscapes.
- destruction
of crops and reduced farm productivity
- competition
for grazing lands and water, livestock predation, injury and death to
farmers,
- damage
to infrastructure and
- increased risk
of disease transmission among wildlife and
Conflict mitigation strategies includes:
- Lethal
control
- Translocation
of problematic animals
- Predator-deterring
guard dogs
- Effective
land use planning
- Compensation
- Spatial
analyses and mapping conflict hotspots:
- Erection
of fences or other barriers
- Managing
garbage to prevent attraction of carnivores
- Improving
community education and perception of animals
- population
size regulation and
- endangered
species preservation
- applying
scientific research, sociological studies, and the arts to reducing
conflicts.
Existing government policies:
- The
government has come up with some policies to grapple with the problem:
The compensation for human deaths has been increased from Rs 2.5
lakh to Rs 5 lakh;
- Project
Elephant and National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) guidelines have
been issued to mitigate the conflict.
- Immune-contraception has been introduced in order to control the population of nilgai, monkeys and wild boars.
Way forward
- Resolving
human-wildlife conflicts and fostering coexistence requires well-informed,
holistic, and collaborative processes that take into account underlying
social, cultural and economic contexts.
- Government
must explicitly include human-wildlife conflict in national policies and
strategies for wildlife management, development and poverty alleviation.
- At
the national level, cross-sectoral collaboration between forestry,
wildlife, agriculture, livestock and other relevant sectors is key to
tackle this menace.
Very good 👍
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