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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
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    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'll 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 guidership 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 period,
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    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
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    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 only 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 a 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,
    the 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 bee sting
    that they're scared of.
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    It's perhaps thousands of bee stings,
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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
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    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 elephants 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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    (Sounds of bees buzzing)
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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 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
    front line 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 farm land.
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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 the 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 out 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
    chilly 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:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:10

English subtitles

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