A new report by the Wildlife Institute of India suggests population control of four species that are most in conflict with humans. The study was done in pursuit of a humane solution to increasing conflicts with certain species, as some states were considering culling. Researchers insist that the report provides only baseline information and the solutions will remain on paper without long-term study and data collection. Mongabay-India’s Arathi Menon reports
A recent study addresses rising negative interactions between humans and animals and proposes population control measures as long-term solutions, while emphasising the need for continued research.
In states such as Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Kerala, where conflicts with certain animals such as rhesus macaques and wild boars reached a tipping point, the animals have been tagged vermin and cullings are mooted. As a humane solution to the problem, the Wildlife Institute of India, after three years of research into the matter, has come up with mitigation measures including immuno-contraception for population control of species most-in-conflict. The four species studied were rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta), nilgai (Boselaphus tragocamelus), wild pig (Sus scrofa) and elephant (Elephas maximus).
The WII researchers maintain that the current project was aimed only at establishing baseline information for possible strategies for future interventions. “The project was envisioned as a minimum 10-year project, not a one-off short-term study to be implemented on the field immediately,” said Vishnupriya Kolipakam, one of the researchers involved in the study.
Sterlisation as an alternative solution to culling
The idea was mooted with “macaque trouble” within the WII campus in Dehradun, Uttarakhand. The scientists at WII knew that the most popular solution to negative interactions with animals — of translocating the problem species, thereby moving the problem elsewhere — was unscientific. A proposal to control the population of the macaques was submitted to the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) that felt the idea could be extended to certain other species, too. According to Qamar Qureshi, a professor who led the WII project titled Population management of species involved in human wildlife conflict, the team started with understanding the population ecology of the four species, necessary for deriving a solution.
The study areas were within a five-km-radius of the Wildlife Institute of India in Dehradun and Rajaji Tiger Reserve in Uttarakhand for rhesus macaques; Pench and Panna Tiger Reserves in Madhya Pradesh for nilgai and wild pig; Hassan and Kodagu districts of Karnataka for Asiatic elephants and wild pigs.
The study suggests mass capture and surgical sterilisation for rhesus macaques; immuno-contraception using drugs like Porcine Zona Pellucida (PZP) found to be effective in African elephants for Asiatic elephants; mass capture and release in protected areas with low prey density for wild pigs and nilgai, using boar buster cages and boma method respectively. Boma method is an African technique used to lure animals into an enclosure by chasing them through a funnel-like fencing made of cloth.
Anish Andheria, the president and the CEO of the Wildlife Conservation Trust, who was not part of the study, said that it was a good idea to come up with population control strategies for three species — rhesus macaques, nilgai and wild boar, as the population of those species increased primarily due to humans. “Indiscriminate disposal of food waste, habitat destruction and the absence of predators have all contributed to the increase in their population and the conflict,” he said.
Should the population of an endangered species be controlled?
Some experts say they believe that Asiatic elephants, listed “endangered” on IUCN Red List with a declining population worldwide and are given maximum protection under the Wildlife Protection Act 1972 in India, should not have been a part of this study. “Unlike other species studied that do well in human habitations, elephant population has gone down due to humans,” Andheria said.
The authors of the paper say that in Kodagu and Hassan in South India, the damages caused by elephants are far more severe than other study species. Kolipakam, however, assured that the project is the preliminary stage of exploring a possible intervention where they have studied the population ecology of these species. “We have only scratched the surface with this study, not suggesting it as a short-term solution,” she said. Studies from Africa have shown that PZP has been effective in the population control of elephants there. She shared that the trial phases of these experiments need to be accounted for where it could probably be implemented on elephants in captivity before taking it to the wild elephants.
“If we do reproductive intervention, we need to find the outcomes like how the animal behaviour will be impacted and how the population structure will change, etc. through long-term observation,” Kolipakam said, adding that these solutions would remain on paper until long term studies are done.
IMAGES:
1. An infant rhesus macaque near a monument in New Delhi. A new study proposes surgical sterilisation to control the Rhesus macaque population. Photo by Eatcha/Wikimedia Commons.
2. A wild boar in Annamalai hills in the southern Western Ghats. A new study that explores ways to control human-wildlife conflict suggests capture and translocation of wild boars to protected areas as a solution. Photo by P. Jeganathan/Wikimedia Commons.
3. A nilgai at Sultanpur National Park, Haryana. The study proposes capturing nilgai using the boma method for translocation. Photo by Kandukuru Nagarjun/Flickr.
Mongabay India/TWF