Protecting forest elephants is a much more difficult task than protecting Savannah elephants. The forest is thick and seeing the wildlife as well as locating the poachers is labor intensive. All the patrols here in the forests of Central Africa are done on foot, therefore covering only a small part of the protected areas. So despite enormous effort expended on anti poaching patrols the poachers always have the advantage where the vegetation covers everything. Flying over the forests presents a view of a vast sea of what looks like broccoli with the tree canopy covering everything, affording no glimpse into what is happening on the forest floor. Even if poachers are camped there within even sighting smoke from their camp fires is impossible. So the best tool in locating poachers is information from trusted sources. Guards have a difficult job not only in terms of their actual work but face harassment in the community where they are seen as a threat to many people’s livelihoods. In an area where employment is rife it is a job someone accepts for the money and not on the principle or interest of conserving wildlife. This is a harsh economic reality.

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Park Guards

Hunting here is done for several species and includes several methods. The most widely hunted animal is duiker, a small forest antelope. These reproduce very quickly and are the most common animal for sale. They are generally caught using wire cable set on game paths in the forest. Another way of hunting them is at night with a gun. The local Bayaka people hunt them using two methods. The first is to call them by imitating their distress call which is a high, nasal whine. Various animals are attracted to this call and as they approach the animals can be speared or shot depending on the resources of the hunter. Perhaps the most exciting hunt of all is the net hunt with the Bayaka when everyone participates. The nets are made by hand using a forest vine from which twine is made, and then fashioned into a net. Several hunters string their nets together in a line or semi-circle and then beat the ground with branches and noise driving the animals into the net where they are trapped. Then the animals are killed by using a machete or stick. This all sounds cruel but of all the methods this is the most sustainable one and provides a good source of protein for forest people.

There are many arms used in poaching elephants and until about a decade ago only shot-guns, high caliber rifles, and home made guns were used here. Now we are seeing more and more Kalashnikovs or AK-47s. These are automatic weapons invented by a gentleman of the same name, Kalashnikov. They are responsible for so much suffering in the world being found in every war and civil conflict in the world. Poachers have found them to also be an effective weapon against animals especially bigger animals because it takes little skill with an AK-47. The Chinese also produced the same model of gun which is more widespread than the AK-47 and is cheaper which doesn’t bode well for the people and animals of this planet. With a couple of AK-47s one with a little skill can kill an elephant group in a few minutes. The sound of this gun in the forest from a distance sounds like a train coming at you. It reverberation fills the forest.

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AK 47s or Kalashnikov

People here are very resourceful and if you don’t have the money to purchase a gun there are ways of making crude, rudimentary guns. These are called yalingas in the local language but since they are not precision instruments they often explode maiming the hunter. Another method is to modify ammunition making it more effective. Poachers take a 12 gauge shotgun shell removing all the shot and then melt the pellets to form a single piece of lead whose point is sharpened. This single piece of lead is put back into the shell casing. This is also dangerous and can cause a gun to explode in the hands of the hunter. These are used often in elephant poaching. Often they don’t kill the elephant but leave a huge hole in the animal. On several occasions we have seen wounded animals with sizable holes in their heads from these modified shells. My many years in Africa have been a continual lesson in the resourcefulness of people some of it positive but much of it negative.

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Modified Shot Gun Shells

The Central African Republic until the 1980’s had thousands of elephants both forest and savannah species. This all changed with civil wars in both Chad and the Sudan which border the CAR on its northern borders. With wars in both countries there was spill over into CAR and the first casualty was the wildlife. Sudanese horsemen who formerly hunted with spears now had access to automatic weaponry and slaughtered thousands of elephants starting in the 1980’s and the poaching continues today. This area was vast and there was never enough resources for sufficient protection. Today the guns have been turned on the people who flee their villages and become refugees. So what was once a veritable eden has been transformed into hell.



Comments:
3 Comments posted on "Protecting the Beast"
TheTeach, Seattle on June 1st, 2008 at 5:40 pm

Thanks for the interesting and sobering facts on the matter. These are important details often left out of the reporting by the media. The more I learn, the more I am amazed that there are any elephants remaining at all in any of these plundered and savaged regions of anarchy (Chad, Sudan, border areas). It would appear that miracles, natural resiliancy, or just plain dumb luck are still at work in the natural world, despite human greed, vice, and legitimate subsistence harvesting. Of course, without the conservation presence on some level and the patrols, it might all, already be lost. Seems important that all the rangers be armed with
AK-47’s as well. Gotta fight fire with fire. I’ve seen rangers in some parks in Africa armed with what looks like WW II vintage
M-1 rifles and equipment. I hope CAR’s rangers have better resources at their disposal to confront the daily dangers of their work. The photo seems to indicate effective arms for self defense.


Annie on June 1st, 2008 at 8:13 pm

Thanks for the information and all you do to protect these precious creatures!


Sherri S. on June 2nd, 2008 at 2:21 pm

I wish people could turn that same ingenuity that allows them to be able to rig up a gun from nothing into something productive rather than destructive.


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