Demographic responses to changes in conservation management : a case study on elephants in the Kruger National Park
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
Conservation management approaches for elephants in southern Africa, and particularly in the
Kruger National Park, have changed. Recently, Kruger’s managers adapted their approach
from artificially manipulating elephant numbers to reinstating and embracing densitydependent
processes that could limit or regulate the elephant population. However, few studies
have evaluated whether changes in Kruger’s elephant management approach were effective in
achieving the desired outcomes. This is a common shortcoming in conservation endeavours
and has the potential to undermine future initiatives. In my thesis, I address this shortcoming,
and assess whether recent changes in conservation management in Kruger induced
demographic responses from the elephant population that ecological theory predicted and
managers desired.
My assessment into how calf recruitment and population growth rates responded to
ecological limitations (i.e. climate, primary productivity and density) during two contrasting
management eras suggests that changes in management induced predicted and desired
demographic responses. During the culling era (i.e. density suppression, water supplementation
and fencing), population growth rates were primarily driven by the density-independent,
climate-mediated, reproductive patterns of the population. In the post-culling era (i.e. natural
variation in density, artificial waterhole and fence removals), density-dependence was
reinstated and took over as the primary driver of population growth. Although not empirically
tested, density-dependent weaned calf survival and dispersal likely contributed to densitydependent
population growth during the latter era and should be the focus of future work.
I then determined that the changes in management promoted density-dependent habitat
selection, a fundamental driver of population regulation. I found that as densities increased
following the cessation of culling, selection for woody cover, an important resource for
elephants, generalized (i.e. decreased selection of areas with high woody cover and increased selection of areas with lower woody cover). Furthermore, selection for areas close to or far
from rivers was mediated by rainfall. While not directly related to changes in density, varied
selection for rivers may moderate density-dependent feedbacks to demographic parameters by
alleviating foraging restrictions and clustering around key resources. The question remains
however, whether density-dependent and rainfall-mediated changes to habitat selection have
fitness consequences for elephants that could ultimately regulate the population.
Elephants in Kruger responded, at least demographically and partly, to changes in
conservation management as theory predicted and managers desired. Although the population
has not yet entered the sought after state of long-term stability, my assessment suggests that
some of the density-dependent processes necessary to regulate the population are present. I
suggest avenues of further study and advocate that ecological principles provide an effective
framework for the scientific evaluation and conservation management of elephants within and
beyond the Kruger National Park.
Description
Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2015.
Keywords
UCTD
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Robson, AS 2015, Demographic responses to changes in conservation management : a case study on elephants in the Kruger National Park, MSc Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/50768>