Oryx (Jan 2024)

African Forest elephants persist in Guinea-Bissau but require an emergency conservation plan

  • Luís Palma,
  • Raquel Godinho,
  • Quebá Quecuta,
  • Tomé Mereck,
  • João Mandeck,
  • Teli Uri Só,
  • Juan Pablo Cancela,
  • Pedro Beja

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0030605323000674
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 58
pp. 125 – 128

Abstract

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The status of the forest elephant Loxodonta cyclotis in Guinea-Bissau has been in doubt since the last assessment in 2006. In 2020–2022 we carried out field surveys to update the species' status. We found elephant signs within an area of c. 1,000 km2. Microsatellite genotyping of faeces identified four males. Females could not be individually identified but their presence was confirmed by molecular sex determination. Camera trapping (2,075 camera-trap days) recorded 824 photos in 24 independent sequences, involving three males and two presumed females. The continued presence of elephants in Guinea-Bissau raises hope for the species in the region, but urgent efforts are needed to refine population range and size estimates, increase protected area coverage, and reduce ongoing and impending habitat loss. An emergency conservation action plan is a priority.

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