Human–Elephant Conflict in Jharkhand: Rising Threat Due to Habitat Loss

Context:
A rogue single-tusked elephant (tusker) caused widespread panic in West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand, killing 20 people between January 1 and 9, highlighting the increasing Human–Elephant Conflict (HEC) due to shrinking habitats and ecological pressures.

Key Highlights:

Incident and Response Measures
• A single male tusker attacked villagers in the Chaibasa and Kolhan forest areas of West Singhbhum district.
• Most attacks occurred during night hours, creating fear among villagers.
• The Jharkhand Forest Department launched a large-scale search operation involving over 100 personnel.
• Experts from Odisha and West Bengal and wildlife specialists from Vantara (Gujarat) were called to tranquilize and monitor the elephant.

Habitat Degradation and Ecological Pressures
• The Saranda Forest, part of the Singhbhum Elephant Reserve, faces severe pressure from iron ore mining and habitat fragmentation.
• Degradation of elephant corridors has intensified human-wildlife interactions.

Impact of Human–Elephant Conflict
• According to the Jharkhand Forest, Environment and Climate Change Department, around 1,270 people have died in elephant attacks in the last 18 years.
• A Wildlife Institute of India (WII) study highlights the economic and social losses including:

  • Crop destruction
  • Property damage
  • Human injuries and deaths

Community Responses
• Villagers are adopting preventive methods such as:

  • Keeping bonfires burning at night
  • Digging trenches around settlements
  • Avoiding outdoor movement after sunset

Declining Elephant Population
• Elephant population in Jharkhand declined from 678 in 2017 to about 217, indicating severe habitat fragmentation and human disturbances.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Human–Elephant Conflict (HEC)
  • Occurs when elephants and humans compete for space and resources.
  • Leads to crop loss, property damage, and human or animal casualties.
  • Project Elephant
  • Launched by the Government of India in 1992.
  • Implemented by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC).
  • Objectives:
  • Conservation of elephants and their habitats
  • Protection of migration corridors
  • Mitigation of human-elephant conflict
  • Elephant Reserves in India
  • Declared under Project Elephant.
  • India has over 30 Elephant Reserves.
  • Saranda Forest
  • Located in Jharkhand, one of the largest Sal forests in Asia.
  • Important habitat for Asian elephants.
  • Asian Elephant (Elephas maximus)
  • Listed as Endangered in the IUCN Red List.
  • Included in Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.

Relevant Mains Points:

Causes of Human–Elephant Conflict
Habitat fragmentation due to mining, roads, railways, and urban expansion.
• Loss of traditional elephant corridors.
• Expansion of agriculture into forest areas.
Climate change and ecological stress affecting food and water availability.

Consequences
• Increased human fatalities and property damage.
• Retaliatory killing or harassment of wildlife.
• Threat to long-term conservation of elephants.

Mitigation Strategies
• Identification and protection of elephant corridors.
• Deployment of early warning systems and monitoring technology.
Community-based conservation programs.
• Compensation mechanisms for crop loss and human casualties.

Way Forward
• Strengthen land-use planning and corridor protection.
• Regulate mining and infrastructure projects in elephant habitats.
• Promote technology-based conflict mitigation (GPS tracking, sensors).
• Improve community awareness and livelihood support programs.
• Strengthen implementation of Project Elephant and landscape-level conservation.

UPSC Relevance:
GS Paper III – Environment and Ecology (Human–Wildlife Conflict, Conservation)
GS Paper I – Geography (Forest ecosystems and human interaction)
Prelims – Project Elephant, Saranda Forest, Asian Elephant status

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