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How bees can keep the peace between elephants and humans

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    Ever since I can remember,
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    African elephants have filled me
    with a sense of complete awe.
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    They are the largest land mammal
    alive today on planet Earth,
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    weighing up to seven tons,
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    standing three and a half meters
    tall at the shoulder.
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    They can eat up to 400 kilos
    of food in a day,
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    and they disperse vital plant seeds
    across thousands of kilometers
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    during their 50-to-60-year life span.
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    Central to their compassionate
    and complex society are the matriarchs.
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    These female, strong leaders
    nurture the young
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    and navigate their way
    through the challenges of the African bush
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    to find food, water and security.
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    Their societies are so complex,
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    we're yet to still fully tease apart
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    how they communicate,
    how they verbalize to each other,
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    how their dialects work.
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    And we don't really understand yet
    how they navigate the landscape,
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    remembering the safest places
    to cross a river.
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    I'm pretty sure that like me,
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    most of you in this room
    have a similar positive emotional response
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    to these most magnificent of all animals.
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    It's really hard not to have
    watched a documentary,
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    learned about their intelligence
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    or, if you've been lucky,
    to see them for yourselves
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    on safari in the wild.
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    But I wonder how many of you
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    have been truly,
    utterly terrified by them.
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    I was lucky to be brought up
    in Southern Africa
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    by two teacher parents
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    who had long holidays
    but very short budgets.
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    And so we used to take
    our old Ford Cortina Estate,
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    and with my sister, we'd pile in the back,
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    take our tents and go camping
    in the different game reserves
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    in Southern Africa.
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    It really was heaven for a young,
    budding zoologist like myself.
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    But I remember even at that young age
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    that I found the tall electric fences
    blocking off the game parks
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    quite divisive.
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    Sure, they were keeping elephants
    out of the communities,
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    but they also kept communities
    out of their wild spaces.
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    It really was quite a challenge to me
    at that young age.
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    It was only when I moved to Kenya
    at the age of 14,
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    when I got to connect to the vast,
    wild open spaces of East Africa.
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    And it is here now
    that I feel truly, instinctively,
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    really at home.
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    I spent many, many happy years
    studying elephant behavior in a tent,
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    in Samburu National Reserve,
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    under the guideship of professor
    Fritz Vollrath and Iain Douglas-Hamilton,
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    studying for my PhD and understanding
    the complexities of elephant societies.
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    But now, in my role as head
    of the human-elephant coexistence program
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    for Save the Elephants,
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    we're seeing so much change
    happening so fast
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    that it's urged a change
    in some of our research programs.
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    No longer can we just sit
    and understand elephant societies
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    or study just how to stop the ivory trade,
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    which is horrific and still ongoing.
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    We're having to change
    our resources more and more
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    to look at this rising problem
    of human-elephant conflict,
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    as people and pachyderms compete
    for space and resources.
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    It was only as recently as the 1970s
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    that we used to have 1.2 million elephants
    roaming across Africa.
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    Today, we're edging closer
    to only having 400,000 left.
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    And at the same time period,
    the human population has quadrupled,
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    and the land is being
    fragmented at such a pace
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    that it's really hard to keep up with.
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    Too often, these migrating elephants
    end up stuck inside communities,
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    looking for food and water
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    but ending up breaking open water tanks,
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    breaking pipes
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    and, of course, breaking
    into food stores for food.
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    It's really a huge challenge.
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    Can you imagine the terror
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    of an elephant literally
    ripping the roof off your mud hut
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    in the middle of the night
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    and having to hold your children away
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    as the trunk reaches in,
    looking for food in the pitch dark?
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    These elephants
    also trample and eat crops,
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    and this is traditionally eroding away
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    that tolerance that people
    used to have for elephants.
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    And sadly, we're losing
    these animals by the day
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    and, in some countries, by the hour --
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    to not only ivory poaching
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    but this rapid rise
    in human-elephant conflict
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    as they compete for space and resources.
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    It's a massive challenge.
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    I mean, how do you keep
    seven-ton pachyderms,
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    that often come in groups of 10 or 12,
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    out of these very small rural farms
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    when you're dealing with people
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    who are living
    on the very edge of poverty?
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    They don't have big budgets.
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    How do you resolve this issue?
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    Well, one issue is, you can just start
    to build electric fences,
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    and this is happening across Africa,
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    we're seeing this more and more.
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    But they are dividing up areas
    and blocking corridors.
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    And I'm telling you, these elephants
    don't think much of it either,
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    particularly if they're blocking
    a really special water hole
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    where they need water,
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    or if there's a very attractive
    female on the other side.
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    It doesn't take long
    to knock down one of these poles.
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    And as soon as there's a gap in the fence,
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    they go back, talk to their mates
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    and suddenly they're all through,
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    and now you have 12 elephants
    on the community side of the fence.
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    And now you're really in trouble.
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    People keep trying to come up
    with new designs for electric fences.
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    Well, these elephants
    don't think much of those either.
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    (Laughter)
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    So rather than having these hard-line,
    straight, electric,
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    really divisive migratory-blocking fences,
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    there must be other ways
    to look at this challenge.
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    I'm much more interested in holistic
    and natural methods
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    to keep elephants and people
    apart where necessary.
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    Simply talking to people,
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    talking to rural pastoralists
    in northern Kenya
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    who have so much knowledge about the bush,
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    we discovered this story that they had
    that elephants would not feed on trees
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    that had wild beehives in them.
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    Now this was an interesting story.
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    As the elephants
    were foraging on the tree,
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    they would break branches
    and perhaps break open a wild beehive.
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    And those bees would fly out
    of their natural nests
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    and sting the elephants.
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    Now if the elephants got stung,
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    perhaps they would remember
    that this tree was dangerous
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    and they wouldn't come back
    to that same site.
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    It seems impossible that they could be
    stung through their thick skin --
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    elephant skin is around
    two centimeters thick.
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    But it seems that they sting them
    around the watery areas,
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    around the eyes, behind the ears,
    in the mouth, up the trunk.
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    You can imagine they would
    remember that very quickly.
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    And it's not really one sting
    that they're scared of.
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    African bees have a phenomenal ability:
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    when they sting in one site,
    they release a pheromone
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    that triggers the rest of the bees
    to come and sting the same site.
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    So it's not one beesting
    that they're scared of --
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    it's perhaps thousands of beestings,
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    coming to sting in the same area --
    that they're afraid of.
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    And of course, a good matriarch
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    would always keep her young
    away from such a threat.
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    Young calves have much thinner skins,
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    and it's potential
    that they could be stung
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    through their thinner skins.
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    So for my PhD,
    I had this unusual challenge
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    of trying to work out
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    how African elephants
    and African bees would interact,
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    when the theory was
    that they wouldn't interact at all.
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    How was I going to study this?
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    Well, what I did was I took the sound
    of disturbed African honey bees,
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    and I played it back to elephants
    resting under trees
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    through a wireless speaker system,
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    so I could understand how they would react
    as if there were wild bees in the area.
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    And it turns out that they react
    quite dramatically
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    to the sound of African wild bees.
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    Here we are, playing the bee sounds
    back to this amazing group of elephants.
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    You can see the ears going up, going out,
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    they're turning their heads
    from side to side,
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    one elephant is flicking her trunk
    to try and smell.
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    There's another elephant
    that kicks one of calves on the ground
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    to tell it to get up
    as if there is a threat.
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    And one elephant triggers a retreat,
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    and soon the whole family of elephants
    are running after her
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    across the savannah in a cloud of dust.
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    (Sound of bees buzzing)
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    (Sound of bees ends)
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    Now I've done this experiment
    many, many times,
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    and the elephants almost always flee.
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    Not only do they run away,
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    but they dust themselves
    as they're running,
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    as if to knock bees out of the air.
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    And we placed infrasonic microphones
    around the elephants
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    as we did these experiments.
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    And it turns out they're communicating
    to each other in infrasonic rumbles
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    to warn each other of the threat of bees
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    and to stay away from the area.
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    So these behavioral discoveries
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    really helped us understand
    how elephants would react
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    should they hear or see bee sounds.
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    This led me to invent a novel design
    for a beehive fence,
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    which we are now building around small,
    one-to-two-acre farms
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    on the most vulnerable
    frontline areas of Africa
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    where humans and elephants
    are competing for space.
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    These beehive fences
    are very, very simple.
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    We use 12 beehives and 12 dummy hives
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    to protect one acre of farmland.
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    Now a dummy hive
    is simply a piece of plywood
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    which we cut into squares, paint yellow
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    and hang in between the hives.
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    We're basically tricking the elephants
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    into thinking there are more beehives
    than there really are.
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    And of course, it literally
    halves the cost of the fence.
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    So there's a hive and a dummy hive
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    and a beehive and now dummy hive,
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    every 10 meters
    around the outside boundary.
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    They're held up by posts
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    with a shade roof to protect the bees,
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    and they're interconnected
    with a simple piece of plain wire,
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    which goes all the way around,
    connecting the hives.
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    So if an elephant tries to enter the farm,
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    he will avoid the beehive at all cost,
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    but he might try and push through
    between the hive and the dummy hive,
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    causing all the beehives to swing
    as the wire hits his chest.
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    And as we know from our research work,
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    this will cause the elephants
    to flee and run away --
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    and hopefully remember
    not to come back to that risky area.
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    The bees swarm out of the hive,
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    and they really scare the elephants away.
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    These beehive fences we're studying
    using things like camera traps
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    to help us understand
    how elephants are responding
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    to them at night time,
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    which is when most
    of the crop raiding occurs.
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    And we found in our study farms
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    that we're keeping
    up to 80 percent of elephants
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    outside of the boundaries of these farms.
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    And the bees and the beehive fences
    are also pollinating the fields.
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    So we're having a great reduction
    both in elephant crop raids
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    and a boost in yield
    through the pollination services
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    that the bees are giving
    to the crops themselves.
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    The strength of the beehive fences
    is really important --
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    the colonies have to be very strong.
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    So we're trying to help farmers
    grow pollinator-friendly crops
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    to boost their hives,
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    boost the strength of their bees
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    and, of course, produce
    the most amazing honey.
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    This honey is so valuable as an extra
    livelihood income for the farmers.
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    It's a healthy alternative to sugar,
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    and in our community,
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    it's a very valuable present
    to give a mother-in-law,
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    which makes it almost priceless.
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    (Laughter)
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    We now bottle up this honey,
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    and we've called this wild beautiful honey
    Elephant-Friendly Honey.
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    It is a fun name,
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    but it also attracts
    attention to our project
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    and helps people understand
    what we're trying to do
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    to save elephants.
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    We're working now with so many women
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    in over 60 human-elephant conflict sites
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    in 19 countries in Africa and Asia
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    to build these beehive fences,
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    working very, very closely
    with so many farmers
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    but particularly now with women farmers,
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    helping them to live better
    in harmony with elephants.
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    One of the things we're trying to do
    is develop a toolbox of options
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    to live in better harmony
    with these massive pachyderms.
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    One of those issues
    is to try and get farmers,
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    and women in particular,
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    to think different
    about what they're planting
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    inside their farms as well.
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    So we're looking at planting crops
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    that elephants don't particularly
    want to eat, like chillies,
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    ginger, Moringa, sunflowers.
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    And of course, the bees and the beehive
    fences love these crops too,
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    because they have beautiful flowers.
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    One of these plants
    is a spiky plant called sisal --
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    you may know this here as jute.
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    And this amazing plant
    can be stripped down
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    and turned into a weaving product.
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    We're working with these amazing women now
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    who live daily with
    the challenges of elephants
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    to use this plant to weave into baskets
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    to provide an alternative income for them.
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    We've just started construction
    only three weeks ago
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    on a women's enterprise center
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    where we're going to be working
    with these women
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    not only as expert beekeepers
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    but as amazing basket weavers;
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    they're going to be processing
    chili oils, sunflower oils,
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    making lip balms and honey,
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    and we're somewhere on our way
    to helping these participating farmers
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    live with better eco-generating projects
    that live and work better
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    with living with elephants.
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    So whether it's matriarchs
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    or mothers or researchers like myself,
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    I do see more women
    coming to the forefront now
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    to think differently and more boldly
    about the challenges that we face.
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    With more innovation,
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    and perhaps with some more empathy
    towards each other,
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    I do believe we can move
    from a state of conflict with elephants
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    to true coexistence.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How bees can keep the peace between elephants and humans
Speaker:
Lucy King
Description:

Imagine waking in the middle of the night to an elephant ripping the roof from your house in search of food. This is a reality in some communities in Africa where, as wild spaces shrink, people and elephants are competing for space and resources like never before. In this engaging talk, zoologist Lucy King shares her solution to the rising conflict: fences made from beehives that keep elephants at bay while also helping farmers establish new livelihoods.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:10

English subtitles

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