BBC Wildlife Magazine

UNDER PRESSURE

“ELEPHANTS ARE valued more in India than all other animals put together,” says Anish Andheria, CEO of Wildlife Conservation Trust. “Lord Ganesha, the most worshipped and revered Hindu God, is half-human and half-elephant.”

Sadly, revered status isn’t keeping these animals safe. Elephants were declared the National Heritage Animal of India in 2010 and granted Schedule 1 status – the highest protection level in the country, on a par with tigers. But elephants and people are frequently coming into contact, leading to horrific flashpoints of violence in which both are losing their lives. “Around 1,400 human and 300 elephant casualties occurred in India due to human-elephant conflict between 2018 and 2020,” Andheria explains, the figure not including captive elephants.

Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) are listed as Endangered on the IUCN’s Red List. Their numbers have declined by at least 50 per cent over the past three generations, largely due to habitat loss.

India is currently home to about 27,000 elephants, found in 17 states, including Arunachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. While conflict between elephants and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Wildlife Magazine

BBC Wildlife Magazine3 min read
Flightless Birds
Endemic to a South Atlantic island with the very on-the-nose name of Inaccessible Island, it’s long been a mystery how this tiny brown bird (just 15.5cm long) arrived there in the first place. Genome sequencing has suggested that its closest-living r
BBC Wildlife Magazine6 min readChemistry
Q&A
Email your questions to wildlifemagazine@ourmedia.co.uk CONTINENTS DON’T COME ANY MORE inhospitable than Antarctica, where life must contend with the longest, darkest, coldest winters and a year-round blanket of snow and ice. There are certainly no t
BBC Wildlife Magazine2 min read
Female Of The Species
MAY IS MY FAVOURITE month in Britain. The countryside is bursting with fecundity as animals seek out partners to foster a new generation. As humans we like to think of these unions as romantic, but the truth is many are shaped by conflict. When males

Related Books & Audiobooks