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Playback of felid growls mitigates crop-raiding by elephants Elephas maximus in southern India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 March 2015

Vivek Thuppil*
Affiliation:
Animal Behavior Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA
Richard G. Coss
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis, USA
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail vivek.thuppil@nottingham.edu.my
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Abstract

We attempted to deter crop-raiding elephants Elephas maximus by using playbacks of threatening vocalizations such as felid growls and human shouts. For this purpose, we tested two sound-playback systems in southern India: a wireless, active infrared beam-triggered system to explore the effects of night-time uncertainty in elephants' assessment of predatory threats, and a passive infrared motion detector-triggered system for closer-range playbacks. Using the first system, we deterred 90% of crop-raiding attempts using tiger Panthera tigris growls, 72.7% using leopard Panthera pardus growls, and 57.1% using human shouts, with no statistically significant difference among the three sounds. Using the second system, playbacks of tiger and lion Panthera leo growls deterred 100 and 83.3% of crop-raiding attempts, respectively, with no statistically reliable difference between the two, although video evidence indicated that elephants were more fearful of tiger growls. Our results indicate that playbacks of threatening sounds can be effective in mitigating human–elephant conflict, particularly in bolstering existing deterrent methods.

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Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2015 
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Locations of the study sites in the vicinity of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve in southern India. The rectangle on the inset shows the location of the main map in India.

Figure 1

Table 1 Numbers of solitary elephants Elephas maximus and herds that encountered active and passive infrared beam playback systems around the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (Fig. 1) in southern India.

Figure 2

Table 2 Numbers of crop-raiding attempts by elephants, and the percentage deterred by playbacks of tiger and leopard growls and human shouts on first and subsequent encounters, at the Ananjera and Nenmeylikunu field sites in southern India (Fig. 1).

Figure 3

Table 3 The sequence of sound-playback exposure and crop-raiding deterrence for a single male elephant at the Ananjera and Nenmeylikunu field sites. Note that the 3rd tiger growl playback event is the 6th overall playback event (in parenthesis) and the 5th leopard growl playback event is the 14th overall playback event (in parenthesis). In this table, every encounter with the playback system is considered, rather than just the final encounter of the night, which was the basis of the elephant-night analyses.

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Thuppil and Coss supplementary material

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