Distribution of savannah elephants (Loxodonta africana africana Blumenbach 1797) within Nazinga game ranch,Southern Burkina Faso |
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Authors: | Emmanuel M. Hema Richard F. W. Barnes Wendengoudi Guenda |
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Affiliation: | 1. Université de Ouagadougou, UFR/SVT, laboratoire de Biologie et Ecologie Animales, 09 B.P. 848 Ouagadougou 09 – Burkina Faso;2. Ecology, Behavior and Evolution Section, Division of Biological Sciences MC‐0116, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093‐0116, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | We tested the hypothesis that elephant distribution inside the Nazinga Game Ranch (Southern Burkina Faso) during the wet season is influenced by villages outside, while in the dry season elephants are restricted only by water. Occupancy was evaluated by recording elephant dung‐piles on 54 line transects in each of three seasons: wet 2006, dry 2007 and dry 2008. We measured the distance of each transect from nearest villages, nearest permanent water sources, nearest guard posts and tourist camps. The results were unexpected: elephant occupancy in the wet season was independent of villages but influenced by poaching, while their occupancy in both dry seasons was determined by the proximity of villages as well as water. In the dry season, elephants were attracted to villages by grain stores and fruiting trees. There has been a dramatic shift in the dry season distribution of elephants, and consequently in browsing pressure, over the last two decades. We suggest that this change is a consequence of the expansion of human activities outside the ranch. This study shows that the effects of growing human disturbance on elephant populations in small protected areas are not predictable. Correcting for spatial autocorrelation had a negligible effect upon the models. |
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Keywords: | Burkina Faso dung elephants occupancy Nazinga villages water |
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