IOL
March 27, 2005
By Leon Marshall
The great elephant herds of the Kruger National Park,
under threat of culling, are migrating
in growing numbers across the border into Mozambique's adjacent
Limpopo Park.
Flying by helicopter over Limpopo Park last Friday, we could see
several herds and single bulls moving through the bush that had
formerly been denuded of game by Mozambique's protracted war and
by serving as a coutada, or hunting ground, under earlier Portuguese
colonial rule.
Also on the helicopter flight, sponsored by South Africa's Peace
Parks Foundation, was an excited Dr Markus Hofmeyr, head of Kruger's
veterinary wildlife services.
He believes that the elephants are signalling each other that
it is safe to return to their old stomping grounds in the Mozambican
area now that the war is over and it no longer serves as a hunting
place or as a "bush meat" abattoir for guerrilla fighters.
Most found openings in the high-security fence at river crossings
This is a remarkable change from four
years ago, when most of the first group of 25 elephants, which
were symbolically handed over to Mozambique by former president
Nelson Mandela to start repopulating their park, made a dash back
to the safety of Kruger.
Most found openings in the high-security fence at river crossings,
but Hofmeyr says one bull trundled for many kilometres along the
fence until he was able to round it where it meets the Limpopo River
border in the far north.
Other game, notably giraffe, buffalo, wildebeest, impala and kudu,
have joined the elephants in crossing from Kruger through gaps in
the fence, mostly at river crossings.
From the helicopter, fair numbers were spotted moving about in
the unspoilt and beautiful Mozambican terrain of high-cliffed river
gorges, valleys and rolling hills.
Hofmeyr says they, too, have probably been taking their cue from
game translocated over the past two years by truck from Kruger into
a 30 000 hectare enclosure in the Mozambican part to get them used
to living on that side of the security fence.
The translocation of 3 000 head of game should be completed this
year, and the enclosure will then be opened at the furthest point
away from Kruger for the animals to start making their own way into
their new country.
Professor Willem van Riet, chief executive of the Peace Parks
Foundation, says the voluntary migration to Limpopo Park shows that
translocations can work in the short term if done effectively. It
is the small translocated groups that are enticing the others across
the border.
Only a relatively small portion of the high-security border fence
separating the two parks has been removed since they were ceremonially
joined together two years ago, with, in name only, Zimbabwe's Gonarezhou
Park.
Together they are called the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park
but the actual link-up across the Limpopo River with Gonarezhou
in troubled Zimbabwe will take a while longer.
Security concerns, especially about illegal immigrants and the
smuggling of weapons and four-wheel-drive vehicles, have been hindering
the removal of more sections of the border fence between the Kruger
and Limpopo parks.
But control systems are now in place that will make it easier
to proceed with the removal of more sections of the fence, which
was put up in the mid-70s at the height of the regional conflict
that also involved apartheid South Africa.
The migration of elephants into Mozambique will relieve some of
the pressure on Kruger where their burgeoning numbers have been
causing serious harm to the habitat. But it is unlikely to stave
off culling.
The elephant population has simply gone too far out of control
since a moratorium was placed on it in 1995. Kruger has about 13
000 elephants, and its maximum carrying capacity is set at about
7 000. Limpopo Park can at most take 3 000.
At a million hectares it is half the size of Kruger and an even
bigger percentage of it is not suitable elephant habitat. So soon
it, too, will be under pressure if Kruger's elephants keep migrating.
A final decision on culling, already building into a major bone
of contention among animal-rights groups internationally, should
be taken some time this year by Marthinus van Schalkwyk, the environmental
affairs and tourism minister.
Meanwhile, the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park's elephant migration
should serve as encouragement for southern Africa's transfrontier-park
programme, in which the Peace Parks Foundation is playing a major
facilitating role.
According to the 2002 African Elephant Status report of the World
Conservation Union, the estimated population for southern Africa
- South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi,
Mozambique and Swaziland - now stands at 300 000.
Botswana has by far the worst problem, with an estimated 120 000
elephants in its Chobe Reserve and Okavango Delta.
This article was originally published on page 5 of Sunday Argus
on March 27, 2005