The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

China’s efforts to save its wandering elephants are laudable, but let's not forget its bloody conflicts with the giants

  • Written by Bill Laurance, Distinguished Research Professor and Australian Laureate, James Cook University

Wild elephants are awe-inspiring — even if they’re trying to kill you, as I discovered in 2004.

At the time I was studying how poachers and loggers threaten native mammals[1] in Africa’s Congo Basin. I was sneaking up on a herd of forest elephants when they suddenly charged, rushing at me like enraged, out-of-control bulldozers. With the angry animals hot on my heels, I barely escaped by diving into a tangle of vines, shuddering with fear but oddly enthralled by it all, too.

Many residents of southern China must be feeling similarly. A herd of 15 Asian elephants, led by adult females, departed last year[2] from Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve[3], near China’s border with Myanmar and Laos. Since then they’ve travelled about 500 kilometres northward[4], and are now approaching the bustling city of Kunming and its seven million inhabitants.

No one knows exactly where the elephants are going, or why. But two things are clear: the elephants were probably struggling to survive in their native habitat, and Chinese efforts to save the elephants clash with the nation’s aggressive strategies of investment and global development[5].

Hope for the homeless

As I’ve seen elsewhere, in Africa and Southeast Asia, hungry wild elephants can severely damage human crops, flattening gardens and orchards in their quest for a free meal.

During their sojourn in China, the behemoths — which can weigh over five tonnes as adults (more than three cars) — have indeed been helping themselves to farmers’ crops and anything else they deem edible from local villages and townships. In fact, they’ve caused more than US$1 million in damage[6] to crops so far.

This whole journey has captured the imagination of millions of Chinese citizens, with state broadcaster CCTV carrying a 24-hour live feed[7] of the spectacle.

Elephants grazing at plants by a road The migrating elephants graze near Shuanghe Township, southwestern China’s Yunnan Province. Yunnan Forest Fire Brigade via AP

At first blush, this sounds like a scenario that could go very badly for the elephants. When pachyderms and people collide, elephants usually lose.

But hope remains for the wandering herd. Asian elephants are a legally protected species in China.

Hundreds of police officers assisted by drones[8] have been monitoring the intrepid animals, while wildlife officials are trying to steer them away from populated areas with food baits and roadblocks involving hundreds of trucks. So far, some 3,500 people[9] have been evacuated temporarily to clear a path for the elephants.

Missing the big picture

Such efforts are laudable but misplaced. They address only the symptoms of environmental stress (displaced elephants) but not the “diseases” afflicting elephants in China and beyond.

Firstly, the wandering elephants may well have been forced to move because their home in southern China has been devastated by human development.

Even 15 years ago, when I first visited the Xishuangbanna region, the native rainforests there were being devastated, especially by clearing for exotic rubber-tree plantations[10].

Rubber-tree plantation in the Xishuangbanna region. In southern China, most native rainforests have been felled for crops such as rubber-tree plantations, as shown here in the Xishuangbanna region. William Laurance

As a result, only about 300 wild elephants[11] survive in all of China today.

Secondly, even with government efforts since 2018 to ban domestic ivory trading, illegal ivory is still being consumed[12] at a terrifying rate.

This bloody trade is one of the main drivers of elephant poaching in Asia and Africa. Chinese citizens working overseas have been widely implicated in wildlife smuggling activities, including illegal ivory.

Read more: China’s growing footprint on the globe threatens to trample the natural world[13]

Finally, as it promotes new roads, dams and other large developments, China’s Belt & Road Initiative, which now spans 139 nations worldwide[14], is rapidly increasing the effects of habitat destruction and human persecution[15] on elephants and other native wildlife.

In Latin America, for example, entrepreneurs and workers from China are causing a dramatic increase in illegal poaching of jaguars[16], the teeth and body parts of which are being used to produce certain traditional Chinese “medicines”.

China’s efforts to save its wandering elephants are laudable, but let's not forget its bloody conflicts with the giants China-funded road-construction project in the Congo Basin. William Laurance

Take-home lessons

What can we learn from China’s wandering elephants? At the outset, it’s clear many people, in China and beyond, are motivated far more easily by large, charismatic animals such as elephants than they are by rather nebulous concepts like ecosystem loss and degradation.

So, as we seek environmental sustainability in our densely populated world, we need to tell more evocative stories that inspire hope[17] and capture the popular imagination.

Read more: Empathy in conservation is hotly debated. Still, the world needs more stories like My Octopus Teacher[18]

China’s wandering elephants also show us nature often needs large expanses of habitat to survive.

The potential habitat for elephants in China has been severely reduced and fragmented, and now totals less than 250,000 hectares overall in the critical Xishuangbanna region[19].

Globally, scores of large-bodied species such as elephants and apex predators such as tigers are in big trouble because of the fatal one-two punch of habitat destruction and human persecution. To sustain these iconic species, we urgently need to conserve Earth’s remaining large ecosystems.

Further, China’s homeless elephants could give us a glimpse into the future. On a planet where most native ecosystems[20] are being sliced and diced[21] to meet humanity’s needs, and where the climate is changing apace, wild animals like the Chinese elephants may increasingly need to pull up roots and move to new territories.

Forest elephant killed by poachers in the Congo Basin. A forest elephant killed by poachers in the Republic of Congo. The animal’s face was hacked off with machetes to remove its valuable ivory tusks. William Laurance

At great expense and effort, China is attempting to save its beleaguered band of elephants as they search for a new home.

But as the nation responsible for more habitat destruction[22], wildlife poaching and greenhouse-gas emissions[23] than any other, China bears a special responsibility to promote sustainable development — not just inside China but overseas as well.

Let’s applaud China’s efforts to save its wandering elephants while we bear in mind that, as a nation and economic superpower, it has far more left to do to ensure our planet remains liveable for vulnerable wildlife — and for us too.

Read more: 'Existential threat to our survival': see the 19 Australian ecosystems already collapsing[24]

References

  1. ^ poachers and loggers threaten native mammals (repository.si.edu)
  2. ^ departed last year (www.abc.net.au)
  3. ^ Xishuangbanna National Nature Reserve (www.yunnanadventure.com)
  4. ^ about 500 kilometres northward (phys.org)
  5. ^ aggressive strategies of investment and global development (www.thecivilengineer.org)
  6. ^ more than US$1 million in damage (www.abc.net.au)
  7. ^ 24-hour live feed (www.abc.net.au)
  8. ^ Hundreds of police officers assisted by drones (www.npr.org)
  9. ^ some 3,500 people (phys.org)
  10. ^ exotic rubber-tree plantations (journals.plos.org)
  11. ^ about 300 wild elephants (phys.org)
  12. ^ still being consumed (c402277.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com)
  13. ^ China’s growing footprint on the globe threatens to trample the natural world (theconversation.com)
  14. ^ 139 nations worldwide (www.cfr.org)
  15. ^ effects of habitat destruction and human persecution (theconversation.com)
  16. ^ illegal poaching of jaguars (www.nytimes.com)
  17. ^ evocative stories that inspire hope (theconversation.com)
  18. ^ Empathy in conservation is hotly debated. Still, the world needs more stories like My Octopus Teacher (theconversation.com)
  19. ^ critical Xishuangbanna region (www.researchgate.net)
  20. ^ native ecosystems (theconversation.com)
  21. ^ sliced and diced (theconversation.com)
  22. ^ habitat destruction (www.ecologicalcitizen.net)
  23. ^ greenhouse-gas emissions (www.activesustainability.com)
  24. ^ 'Existential threat to our survival': see the 19 Australian ecosystems already collapsing (theconversation.com)

Read more https://theconversation.com/chinas-efforts-to-save-its-wandering-elephants-are-laudable-but-lets-not-forget-its-bloody-conflicts-with-the-giants-162767

Times Magazine

This Christmas, Give the Navman Gift That Never Stops Giving – Safety

Protect your loved one’s drives with a Navman Dash Cam.  This Christmas don’t just give – prote...

Yoto now available in Kmart and The Memo, bringing screen-free storytelling to Australian families

Yoto, the kids’ audio platform inspiring creativity and imagination around the world, has launched i...

Kool Car Hire

Turn Your Four-Wheeled Showstopper into Profit (and Stardom) Have you ever found yourself stand...

EV ‘charging deserts’ in regional Australia are slowing the shift to clean transport

If you live in a big city, finding a charger for your electric vehicle (EV) isn’t hard. But driv...

How to Reduce Eye Strain When Using an Extra Screen

Many professionals say two screens are better than one. And they're not wrong! A second screen mak...

Is AI really coming for our jobs and wages? Past predictions of a ‘robot apocalypse’ offer some clues

The robots were taking our jobs – or so we were told over a decade ago. The same warnings are ...

The Times Features

What’s been happening on the Australian stock market today

What moved, why it moved and what to watch going forward. 📉 Market overview The benchmark S&am...

The NDIS shifts almost $27m a year in mental health costs alone, our new study suggests

The National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) was set up in 2013[1] to help Australians with...

Why Australia Is Ditching “Gym Hop Culture” — And Choosing Fitstop Instead

As Australians rethink what fitness actually means going into the new year, a clear shift is emergin...

Everyday Radiance: Bevilles’ Timeless Take on Versatile Jewellery

There’s an undeniable magic in contrast — the way gold catches the light while silver cools it down...

From The Stage to Spotify, Stanhope singer Alyssa Delpopolo Reveals Her Meteoric Rise

When local singer Alyssa Delpopolo was crowned winner of The Voice last week, the cheers were louder...

How healthy are the hundreds of confectionery options and soft drinks

Walk into any big Australian supermarket and the first thing that hits you isn’t the smell of fr...

The Top Six Issues Australians Are Thinking About Today

Australia in 2025 is navigating one of the most unsettled periods in recent memory. Economic pre...

How Net Zero Will Adversely Change How We Live — and Why the Coalition’s Abandonment of That Aspiration Could Be Beneficial

The drive toward net zero emissions by 2050 has become one of the most defining political, socia...

Menulog is closing in Australia. Could food delivery soon cost more?

It’s been a rocky road for Australia’s food delivery sector. Over the past decade, major platfor...