- At the 16th Steering Committee meeting of Project Elephant, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change launched a field manual named-Field Manual for Managing Human-Elephant Conflicts (HEC) in India-to guide forest staffers dealing with HEC in major elephant range states.
 - The manual has been prepared by the ministry, along with the Wildlife Institute of India (WWI) and World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF India).
 - It contains the detailed best practices of minimizing human-elephant conflict. It is drafted with the aim of providing forest officials/ departments and other stakeholders with guidance towards interventions to help mitigate Human Elephant Conflict, both in emergencies and when conflict poses a recurring challenge.
 
Current Data on Elephants in India:
- India is home to approximately around 27,000 Asian Elephants, which is the world’s largest population of the species.
 - As per Elephant Census (2017), Karnataka has the highest number of elephants (6,049), followed by Assam (5,719) and Kerala (3,054).
 
Asian Elephants:
- There are three subspecies of Asian elephant which are the Indian, Sumatran and Sri Lankan.
 - The Indian subspecies has the widest range and accounts for most of the remaining elephants on the continent.
 - The elephant herd is led by the oldest and largest female member (known as the matriarch). This herd includes the daughters of the matriarch and their offspring.
 - Elephants have the longest-known gestational (pregnancy) period of all mammals, lasting up to 680 days (22 months).
 - Females between 14 – 45 years may give birth to calves approximately every four years with the mean interbirth intervals increasing to five years by age 52 and six years by age 60.
 - Global Population: Estimated 20,000 to 40,000.
 
African Elephants:
- There are two subspecies of African elephants, the Savanna (or bush) elephant and the Forest elephant.
 - Global Population- Around 4,00,000.
 - Earlier in July 2020, Botswana (Africa) witnessed the death of hundreds of elephants.
 
Threats:
- Escalation of poaching.
 - Habitat loss.
 - Human-elephant conflict.
 - Mistreatment in captivity.
 - Abuse due to elephant tourism.
 - Rampant mining, Corridor destruction.
 
SOURCE: THE HINDU,THE ECONOMIC TIMES,MINT
        
        
        
        