Long-term Monitoring Of Dzanga Bai Forest Elephants: Forest Clearing Use Patterns. (2013)

Individual identification of the relatively cryptic forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis) at forest clearings currently provides the highest quality monitoring data on this ecologically important but increasingly threatened species.

Journal

PLoS ONE

Author(s)

Turkalo, A. K., Wrege, P. H., Wittemyer G.

Date Published

PLoS One 8(12):e85154 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085154

Summary

Individual identification of the relatively cryptic forest elephant (Loxodonta cyclotis) at forest clearings currently provides the highest quality monitoring data on this ecologically important but increasingly threatened species. Here we present baseline data from the first 20 years of an individually based study of this species, conducted at the Dzanga Clearing, Central African Republic. A total of 3,128 elephants were identified over the 20-year study (1,244 adults; 675 females, 569 males). It took approximately four years for the majority of elephants visiting the clearing to be identified, but new elephants entered the clearing every year of the study. The study population was relatively stable, varying from 1,668 to 1,864 individuals (including juveniles and infants), with increasingly fewer males than females over time.

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