Effects of climate, land use, and human population change on human–elephant conflict risk in Africa and Asia

Author:

Guarnieri Mia1ORCID,Kumaishi Grace1ORCID,Brock Cameryn2ORCID,Chatterjee Mayukh3,Fabiano Ezequiel4ORCID,Katrak-Adefowora Roshni1,Larsen Ashley1ORCID,Lockmann Taylor M.1,Roehrdanz Patrick R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-5131

2. Moore Center for Science, Conservation International, Arlington, VA 22202

3. North of England Zoological Society, Upton, Chester CH2 1LP, United Kingdom

4. Department of Wildlife Management and Tourism Studies, University of Namibia, Katima Mulilo 1096, Namibia

Abstract

Human–wildlife conflict is an important factor in the modern biodiversity crisis and has negative effects on both humans and wildlife (such as property destruction, injury, or death) that can impede conservation efforts for threatened species. Effectively addressing conflict requires an understanding of where it is likely to occur, particularly as climate change shifts wildlife ranges and human activities globally. Here, we examine how projected shifts in cropland density, human population density, and climatic suitability—three key drivers of human–elephant conflict—will shift conflict pressures for endangered Asian and African elephants to inform conflict management in a changing climate. We find that conflict risk (cropland density and/or human population density moving into the 90th percentile based on current-day values) increases in 2050, with a larger increase under the high-emissions “regional rivalry” SSP3 - RCP 7.0 scenario than the low-emissions “sustainability” SSP1 - RCP 2.6 scenario. We also find a net decrease in climatic suitability for both species along their extended range boundaries, with decreasing suitability most often overlapping increasing conflict risk when both suitability and conflict risk are changing. Our findings suggest that as climate changes, the risk of conflict with Asian and African elephants may shift and increase and managers should proactively mitigate that conflict to preserve these charismatic animals.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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