Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia

As the largest terrestrial animal on earth, elephants perform important and irreplaceable ecological roles within their natural ecosystems. However, elephants are regarded as pests owing to significant damages they can cause to farms. Farmers find elephants extremely difficult to manage due to eleph...

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Main Author: Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77161/
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author Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran
author_facet Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran
author_sort Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description As the largest terrestrial animal on earth, elephants perform important and irreplaceable ecological roles within their natural ecosystems. However, elephants are regarded as pests owing to significant damages they can cause to farms. Farmers find elephants extremely difficult to manage due to elephants’ vast appetite, high degree of intelligence to circumvent mitigating efforts, and potential for causing harm. In Malaysia, movement ecology of wildlife is challenging to be incorporated into conservation actions due to lack of direct sightings in the rainforest and difficulty to deploy tracking devices on endangered species. However, the growing database of Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) GPS movement in Malaysia provides opportunities for researchers to elucidate the movement ecology and spatial needs of Asian elephant that can benefit both conservation and management in a variety of ways (e.g., mitigation measures). This study aims to help the agriculture community to manage Human-Elephant Conflict in Johor, Malaysia and promote coexistence with elephants. The objectives of this study are to estimate the home range sizes of collared elephants in Johor using dynamic Brownian Bridge Movement Models and, to determine the impact of land use changes on elephant movement pattern using spatial and pathway analysis. We analysed GPS telemetry data from eight elephant individuals in Johor between 2020 – 2022, and found the elephants to have large area requirements, with mean home ranges (95% utilization) of 245 km² (min-max range 142 km² – 326 km²). The home range sizes were smaller when the proportion of agricultural land used within its home range was higher (R2 = 0.56, p-value = 0.033, F1,6 = 7.58) and when the proportion of forest within its home range was smaller (R2 = 0.59, p-value = 0.027, F1,6 = 8.52). Least-cost path and Circuitscape analyses of possible corridors connecting the core area (50% utilization home range) were used to visualized landscape connectivity and help informed potential sites for the development of corridors in future. This thesis contributes to a better understanding of Asian elephant movements and space use within agricultural and forested landscapes, and help support conservation management of Asian elephants and their habitat.
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spelling nottingham-771612024-03-09T04:40:23Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77161/ Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran As the largest terrestrial animal on earth, elephants perform important and irreplaceable ecological roles within their natural ecosystems. However, elephants are regarded as pests owing to significant damages they can cause to farms. Farmers find elephants extremely difficult to manage due to elephants’ vast appetite, high degree of intelligence to circumvent mitigating efforts, and potential for causing harm. In Malaysia, movement ecology of wildlife is challenging to be incorporated into conservation actions due to lack of direct sightings in the rainforest and difficulty to deploy tracking devices on endangered species. However, the growing database of Asian elephant (Elephas maximus) GPS movement in Malaysia provides opportunities for researchers to elucidate the movement ecology and spatial needs of Asian elephant that can benefit both conservation and management in a variety of ways (e.g., mitigation measures). This study aims to help the agriculture community to manage Human-Elephant Conflict in Johor, Malaysia and promote coexistence with elephants. The objectives of this study are to estimate the home range sizes of collared elephants in Johor using dynamic Brownian Bridge Movement Models and, to determine the impact of land use changes on elephant movement pattern using spatial and pathway analysis. We analysed GPS telemetry data from eight elephant individuals in Johor between 2020 – 2022, and found the elephants to have large area requirements, with mean home ranges (95% utilization) of 245 km² (min-max range 142 km² – 326 km²). The home range sizes were smaller when the proportion of agricultural land used within its home range was higher (R2 = 0.56, p-value = 0.033, F1,6 = 7.58) and when the proportion of forest within its home range was smaller (R2 = 0.59, p-value = 0.027, F1,6 = 8.52). Least-cost path and Circuitscape analyses of possible corridors connecting the core area (50% utilization home range) were used to visualized landscape connectivity and help informed potential sites for the development of corridors in future. This thesis contributes to a better understanding of Asian elephant movements and space use within agricultural and forested landscapes, and help support conservation management of Asian elephants and their habitat. 2024-03-09 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77161/1/Gukaaneswaran%20Kaliyappan%2C%2020400089%2C%20Asian%20elephant%20movement%20ecology%20within%20Human-Elephant%20Conflict%20landscape%20in%20Johor%2C%20Peninsular%20Malaysia.pdf Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran (2024) Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham. gps telemetry elephas maximus movement ecology home range movement patterns peninsular Malaysia
spellingShingle gps telemetry
elephas maximus
movement ecology
home range
movement patterns
peninsular Malaysia
Kaliyappan, Gukaaneswaran
Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title_full Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title_short Asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in Johor, peninsular Malaysia
title_sort asian elephant movement ecology within human-elephant conflict landscape in johor, peninsular malaysia
topic gps telemetry
elephas maximus
movement ecology
home range
movement patterns
peninsular Malaysia
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/77161/