Kenya: Mt. Elgon Elephants - Biome Conservation

Goal:

Reduce human-wildlife conflict along the slopes of Mount Elgon

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Conservation Value:

Mount Elgon is a solitary and inactive volcano located on the border between eastern Uganda and western Kenya. It is the second highest mountain in Kenya (4,321 m) and is topographically prominent and isolated. These geographic features make it an important source of water and biodiversity in the region.

The slopes of Mt Elgon are pitted with a series of caves that contain salt deposits. These caves are visited by wild elephants who gouge the cave walls with their tusks to lick the exposed salt. These are the only elephants known to go deep into caves to mine salt.

 

Threats:

The change in land use from forest to agriculture is putting pressure on habitat of the local elephant population. Encroaching agriculture cuts across the elephants’ movement routes, resulting in human-elephant conflict as elephants raid and consume farm crops.  This poses a danger to humans and elephants alike.

 

Actions & Results:

The project is developing measures to protect people, livelihoods, and elephants, including:

  • Daily patrolling, monitoring, and tracking by community scouts
  • Education and outreach in collaboration with the Kenya Wildlife Service
  • A beehive fence pilot project (bees deter elephants from crossing into farm plots)

Location:

Mount Elgon, Kenya

Size of Area Involved:

73,705 hectares

 

Project Field Partner:

The East African Wild Life Society

 

Our Investment to Date:

Cost (2022-2024): CA$217,664
Budget in 2025 (ICFC portion): US$76,910

Gallery

Video

Elephant Cave – The Salt-mining Elephants of Elgon from Justine Evans on Vimeo.

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