Abstract

The ability to locate essential resources is a critical step for wildlife translocated into novel environments. Understanding this process of exploration is highly desirable for management that seeks to resettle wildlife, particularly as translocation projects tend to be expensive and have a high potential for failure. African savannah elephants (Loxodonta africana) are very mobile and rely on large areas especially in arid environments, and are translocated for differing management and conservation objectives. Thus, research into how translocated elephants use the landscape when released may both guide elephant managers and be useful for translocations of other species that adjust their movement to social and ecological conditions. In this study, we investigated the movement of eight GPS tracked calves (translocated in three cohorts) following their soft release into a 107 km2 fenced wildlife sanctuary in northern Kenya and compared their movement with that of five tracked wild elephants in the sanctuary. We describe their exploration of the sanctuary, discovery of water points, and activity budgets during the first seven, 14, and 20 months after release. We explored how patterns are affected by time since release, ecological conditions, and social factors. We found that calves visited new areas of the sanctuary and water points during greener periods and earlier post-release. Social context was associated with exploration, with later release and association with wild elephants predictive of visits to new areas. Wild elephants tended to use a greater number of sites per 14-day period than the released calves. Activity budgets determined from hidden Markov models (including the states directed walk, encamped, and meandering) suggested that released calves differed from wild elephants. The first two cohorts of calves spent a significantly greater proportion of time in the directed walk state and a significantly lower proportion of time in the encamped state relative to the wild elephants. Our results represent a step forward in describing the movements of elephant orphan calves released to the wild following a period of profound social disruption when they lost their natal family and were rehabilitated with other orphan calves under human care. We discuss the implications of the elephant behavior we observed for improving release procedures and for defining success benchmarks for translocation projects.

Highlights

  • Translocated wild animals face challenges once they are released: they must explore their new environment; learn where to find food, water, and refuge; how to find or avoid conspecifics; how to avoid or evade threats like predators; and how resources and threats may change seasonally

  • We focused on permanent water sources because knowledge and use of permanent water points is critical to translocated elephants during dry periods (Tiller et al, in preparation

  • Release cohorts used fewer of the seven permanent water points per 14day period relative to wild, with some overlap in interquartile ranges: C1 = 1 (1–2); C2 = 1 (1–1); C3 = 1 (1–2); wild = 2 (1–4) (Wilcoxon rank-sum test: W = 7205.5, p < 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Translocated wild animals face challenges once they are released: they must explore their new environment; learn where to find food, water, and refuge; how to find or avoid conspecifics; how to avoid or evade threats like predators (including humans); and how resources and threats may change seasonally. As they gain more knowledge about resources in the landscape and become more comfortable with their surroundings, they may adjust their movement patterns (Berger-Tal and Avgar, 2012; Berger-Tal and Saltz, 2014). This in turn may be used to guide decisions like where, when, and in what groupings to release cohorts, as well as whether and for how long to provide supplemental resources to released populations

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