Studying the elephant-sized issues of living with elephants
On World Elephant Day, PhD student and researcher Tyler Nuckols emphasizes that both groups are important in human-elephant coexistence
Almost every night, Tyler Nuckols can hear fireworks and shoutingânot celebrating a holiday or marking an occasion, but trying to drive elephants back into the forest.
In , where Nuckols is conducting socio-ecological fieldwork as he pursues a PhD in the ČÊĂń±Š”ä Department of Environmental Studies, elephants emerge from the trees of Kui Buri National Park almost every night in search of pineapple.
Over many years, elephants have learned that an easy and accessible meal is in farmersâ fieldsâto the detriment of those fields and farmersâ livelihoods. As farmers lose their source of income and means of supporting their families, elephants risk injury or worse as farmersâalso risking injury or worseâtry to deter them.
ČÊĂń±Š”ä PhD student Tyler Nuckols (left, conducting research in Thailand) and Karen Bailey, assistant professor of environmental studies, emphasize that human-elephant coexistence encompass significant issues of sustainability, economic equity, environmental justice and agricultural adaptation.
For a lot of peopleâmainly those who donât coexist with elephantsâthis may not seem like much of a problem. Elephants, after all, are among the worldâs most beloved and charismatic animals, credited with an emotional range that some claim matches or even exceeds that of humans. People visit a zoo and return home daydreaming about backyard elephants.
But on , being celebrated today, Nuckols emphasizes that the challenges and successes of human-elephant coexistence encompass significant issues of sustainability, economic equity, environmental justice and agricultural adaptation that communities and populations worldwide are tackling as climate change fundamentally reshapes how humans coexist with wildlife.
âWeâre interested in supporting and partnering with local communities to look at solutions to human-elephant conflict beyond the predominant approaches of âWhere do you farm? What do you farm? How much money do you make farming?ââ Nuckols explains. "Our research and community-based conservation approach looks to explore a more complex focus related to factors like identity, access to resources and historical and political factors, among many more layers that may shape how households can engage in solutions to human-elephant conflict and participate in the first place."
Studying coexistence
Nuckols has been working with elephants for more than 10 years, starting with the Elephant Valley Project in Mondulkiri, Cambodiaâan ethical sanctuary and retirement home for elephants that had worked in tourism or logging. After earning a masterâs degree at Colorado State University, and after COVID curtailed his plans to return to Cambodia to study mitigation techniques to prevent elephants from entering agricultural fields, he began working with Karen Bailey, a ČÊĂń±Š”ä assistant professor of environmental studies who leads the
Bailey completed postdoctoral research in southern Africa with communities living outside protected areas âwho were living with the threats of climate change and the impact of sharing the landscape with wildlife,â she says. âSome of the impacts of crop raiding by elephants in southern Africa were significant predictors of potential food insecurity. When thatâs combined with the threats of changing seasons and changing climate as well, the realities of human-elephant coexistence in communities in and outside of conservation areas become really pronounced.â
Tyler Nuckols (second from left, blue shirt) and colleagues from Bring the Elephant Home in Thailand. (Photo: Tyler Nuckols)
As part of the working group with the human-elephant coexistence research organization , Bailey and Nuckols partner with researchers and conservation groups from around the world to study the reasons for conflict between agriculturalists and elephants, as well as develop and test interventions that support livelihoods and work to rebuild community resilience and landscapes in different countries and cultures.
Nuckols began researching in Thailand in 2022, partnering with NGO to study human-elephant conflict and how elephants interact with different types of agricultural crops. Nuckolsâ research also focuses on environmental justice and resilience, and how communities define ecological justice for both humans and elephants.
The community where Nuckolsâ research is based is not only a human-elephant conflict hot spot, but also a success story for conservation and community-based tourism.
âBut despite the positive impacts of tourism and some grassroots efforts, conflict occurs every night,â Nuckols says. âYou can hear fireworks and shouting and people trying to get elephants back into the forest every night. So, one of the ideas that community members are evaluating is crop transition. Research has shown that elephants wonât eat lemongrass, ginger, chili, citronella, so farmers are interested in growing these crops, but the community is asking how to ensure itâs sustainable and equitable.
âChanging crops is a high-risk decision, when they know they can sell monocrop pineapple that theyâve been growing for decades.â
Risk vs. reward
A significant challenge in human-elephant coexistence is the disconnect between people actually living with or near elephants and the rest of the world that is watching and loves elephants, or at least the idea of elephants.
âEven in Thailand, thereâs a huge disconnect between major urban centers like Bangkok and rural provinces,â Nuckols explains. âThese farmers are often villainized or portrayed as invaders. Theyâve been told they should just pack up and give elephants back their habitat, but thatâs not feasible or tenable or just for those people who are being told to leave. Itâs very grim, but weâve had people die in our community from negative encounters with elephants, victims whoâve been attacked in the night while they were guarding their crops.â
Almost every night, farmers in Ruam Thai, Thailand, deal with elephants in their pineapple fields. (Photo: Tyler Nuckols)
Bailey notes that while the world may be watching and feeling invested in the plight of elephants, âthereâs an inherent framing of environmental justice that we more equally share the costs and benefits of the environment. We as people globally benefit from elephants existingâwe get a warm feeling when we think about themâbut we have to remind people that there are costs. We have to think about how to more equitably share the costs and benefits. Anyone who loves elephants and might call themselves an elephant person should know and should be clear that elephant conservation simply will not work if we donât think about those humans and elevate the human components.â
A complicating factor in some climate change discourse is the argument that humans caused it and animals are blameless in it, so animals should be prioritized in human decision making. âThe important nuance is that the rural farmers in Thailand didnât do this,â Bailey says.
âItâs the wealthy individuals all over the world who are, per capita, emitting many more tons of carbon. Thereâs an inherent inequity in who is causing the environmental problems, and often the people and communities experiencing the realities of environmental change arenât key drivers of this change.â
In the community where Nuckols is studying, which is in the rain shadow of a mountain range, drought is a very serious concern. During the last dry season, the reservoir that supplies water to the community nearly dried up. Many farmers in the area grow pineapple for many reasons, one of which is that itâs considered a crop that can survive in high-heat and low-water conditions.
âIn the past few years, though, temperatures in the field can soar to 43, 44 (Celsius) and so even now pineapple is struggling to survive,â Nuckols says. âThose conditions are also driving elephants more and more to the edge of the national park, where a lot of the habitat restoration has been funded by large corporate subsidiaries that donât have time to trek into the forest and dig a water hole.
Elephants at the edge of Kui Buri National Park in Thailand. (Photo: Tyler Nuckols)
âSo, you get a concentration of elephants on the edge of the forest, and as climate change gets worse, as resources get more sparse in the forest, elephants are going to go for high energy, high reward crops like pineapple. In a short hour they can devour an entire patch of pineapple that gives them the nutrients and sugar they would spend days foraging for in the dry forest. Itâs basic risk versus reward.â
Just listen
In researching the complex factors influencing human-elephant conflict and coexistence, Nuckols emphasizes that a foundational principle of the work is that itâs community-driven and community-led.
âWeâre involved in study and data collection, but we do everything in a framework of participatory action research,â Nuckols explains. âWe pilot everything we do with focus groups in the local community, we run everything by a group of trusted stakeholders like the village chief and elders working with our organization. We ask them, âIs this appropriate?â and a lot of things were thrown out the window because theyâre like, âNo way.â
âThe whole group thatâs growing and testing alternative crops now, which is 16 people, are community members who created a collective and are working together. We as researchers act as a bridge to help support the trial, to help find funding. We use our skills to elevate the work that this community is already doing.â
Bailey adds that the lessons learned in researching human-elephant coexistenceâthough the details can vary broadly between cultures, countries and regionsâmay inform human-wildlife coexistence in other areas, including Colorado.
âThere are tons of parallels and tons of lessons to be learned that we can apply more broadly,â Nuckols says. âOne of the biggest is just to listen to community members and help empower those community members. Donât ever go in assuming you know best. Spend time in the community and pilot your work before you go in and think anything is going to work within a community. Make sure community members feel heard, have a meaningful seat at the table and feel empowered to solve these problems.â
Top image: Asian elephants living in Thailand's Kui Buri National Park (Photo: Tyler Nuckols)
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