Article

Chilli-briquettes modify the temporal behaviour of elephants, but not their numbers

Details

Citation

Pozo R, Coulson T, McCulloh G, Stronza A & Songhurst A (2019) Chilli-briquettes modify the temporal behaviour of elephants, but not their numbers. Oryx, 53 (1), pp. 100-108. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0030605317001235

Abstract
Crop loss to foraging elephants is one of the most significant causes of conflict between people and elephants in areas where wild elephants share resources with people. Effective solutions to reduce the effects of human-elephant conflict on local livelihoods are thus essential to foster coexistence between elephants and people. We assessed the effectiveness of chilli-briquettes (bricks made of dry chilli, elephant dung and water) in altering elephants use of space in the eastern Okavango Panhandle, Botswana. We burned > 600 briquettes during the night over a 2-month period to test five treatments: frequent burning of (1) chilli and (2) chilli-free briquettes, occasional burning of (3) chilli and (4) chilli-free briquettes, and (5) a control treatment. Using camera traps and footprint surveys we assessed the number of elephants that used experimental sites, and the times at which they did so. We found elephants changed their movement behaviour from predominantly nocturnal to diurnal in areas where chilli-briquettes were burned throughout the night; however, there was no difference in the mean numbers of individuals between treatments with and without chillies. In other words, chilli-briquettes had a repellent but not a deterrent effect on elephants, keeping them away only at times when chilli-briquettes were smouldering. Based on these findings we recommend the use of chilli-briquettes as a method to deter elephants in the short term. In the long term, chilli-briquettes should be applied in combination with other larger-scale mitigation approaches, such as land management and cooperative community-based tools.

Keywords
Botswana; chilli peppers; crop foraging; crop raiding; HEC; human-elephant conflict; human-wildlife interactions; Okavango Delta;

Journal
Oryx: Volume 53, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2019
Publication date online28/11/2017
Date accepted by journal26/07/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/26000
PublisherCambridge University Press for Fauna and Flora International
ISSN0030-6053