Texting elephants
The text message from the elephant flashed across Richard Lesowapir’s
screen: Kimani was heading for neighbouring farms.
The huge bull elephant had a long history of raiding villagers’ crops
during the harvest, sometimes wiping out six months of income at a time.
But this time, a mobile phone card inserted in his collar sent rangers a
text message. Lesowapir, an armed guard and a driver arrived in a jeep
bristling with spotlights to frighten Kimani back into the Ol Pejeta
conservancy.
Kenya is the first country to try elephant texting as a way to
protect both a growing human population and the wild animals that now
have less room to roam. Elephants are ranked as “near threatened” in the
Red List, an index of vulnerable species published by the International
Union for Conservation of Nature. The race to save Kimani began two
years ago.
The Kenya Wildlife Service had already reluctantly shot five
elephants from the conservatory who refused to stop crop-raiding, and
Kimani was the last of the regular raiders. The Save the Elephants group
wanted to see if he could break the habit.
So they placed a mobile phone SIM card in Kimani’s collar, then set
up a virtual “geofence” using a global positioning system that mirrored
the conservatory’s boundaries. Whenever Kimani approaches the virtual
fence, his collar texts rangers.
-AP
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