A passive conflict between preservation and conservation occurs every day in Zimbabwe’s dusty borderlands of Hwange National Park. Animals exceedingly scurry into nearby villages in search of food and water as climate change causes longer droughts and reduces food sources, which frequently have fatal effects. A new high-tech early warning system combines satellite data with traditional group tenacity to stop these conflictes. Local charity Capon Sibanda takes action whenever elephants that have GPS-tagged elephants process the buffer zones that separate human settlements from exotic lands. Sibanda, 29, one of lots of trained” group guardians” working to protect both people and animals, said,” Every time I wake up, I take my motorcycle, I take my device, and hit the road.” The International Fund for Animal Welfare ( IFAW ) and Zimbabwe’s wildlife authority launched the GPS alert system in 2023 as part of their initiative. It monitors collared elephants, especially matriarchs, a woman who is the head of a family, using real-time tracking and the EarthRanger platform. When animals cross the invisible red lines that separate protected and unprotected lands, digital maps track their movements and issue alerts. This fusion of technology and community outreach has already started to alter the course. Senzeni Sibanda, a local farmer and councilor, says,” We still bang pans, but now we get warnings in time.” However, the issue is more severe than GPS alone can resolve. The elephant population in Zimbabwe is nearly twice the amount of land available. It is estimated to be 100 000. The human toll is rising, but culling (killing animals in a group ) has been off the table for more than 40 years due to high costs and conservation pressure. Between January and April this year, 158 aggressive animals were killed in response. Some southern African countries, including Zimbabwe and Namibia, have proposed radical changes from legalizing elephant meat to donating excess animals to other nations. For example, Botswana’s then-president offered to gift 20, 000 elephants to Germany, and mock-suggested that the country’s wildlife minister send 10, 000 to Hyde Park in the heart of London. Many still believe that the tracking initiative represents a positive step forward. 16 elephants have been collared so far. Hwange, home to 45, 000 elephants, is only a small start, but officials claim it enables them to make smarter, faster decisions based on real-time data.
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