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Borneo and Sumatra

Elephant Flying Squad

An Elephant Flying Squad patrolling the perimeter of a village for wild elephants.
© WWF-Indonesia/Samsuardi

WATCH video footage of a CNN journalist on patrol with the Flying Squad. 

In 2004, WWF introduced the first Elephant Flying Squad to Riau Province in central Sumatra, to a village near the newly established Tesso Nilo National Park. It was a way to bring short-term relief to the intense conflict between people and elephants there and to create support for elephant conservation among hard-hit communities.

Because the region around Tesso Nilo is being logged so rapidly and the forest converted into agricultural plantations, elephants with no place to go are forced to wander in search of food, making farms and commercial plantations an irresistible temptation for elephant-sized appetites.

Two flying squad rangers atop "kunkies," or domesticated elephants, bathing in river.
© WWF-Indonesia/Samsuardi

An Elephant Flying Squad consists of nine rangers with noise and light-making devices, a pick-up truck and four trained elephants that drive wild elephants back into the forest whenever they threaten to enter villages. It has proven to be very effective in reducing losses suffered by local communities near Tesso Nilo. 

Flying squads have a long history in India and other places, but had not been used in central Sumatra before. WWF recruited leaders, mahouts (trainers) and elephants from elephant camps that the Indonesian government maintains. These nine men and four elephants went through intensive training to create bonds and make them effective as a team to drive back wild elephants.

The project has been so successful that companies working in the area are starting their own Elephant Flying Squads to protect their crops from wild elephant raids.

Members of flying squad carrying a noise making device called a cannon pipe filled with carbide. The noise scares away wild elephants from villages or plantations.
© WWF-Indonesia/Samsuardi

Facts about the Elephant Flying Squad
Members:
Four elephants (two male, two female) Eight mahouts (trainers) and one leader The elephants were selected from those housed at the government-run Minas Elephant Camp, where provincial officials keep "problem" elephants that have been captured during human-elephant conflict. They were chosen for their size, strength, health and bravery. 

Location:
The squad operates in Lubuk Kembang Bunga village, on the southeast border of Tesso Nilo National Park in Sumatra. Since May 2006, the squad lives and works together in a permanent camp built on the outskirts of the park so that the elephants and men can bond into a cohesive team.

Watch the Elephant Flying Squad in action


View more Flying Squad videos

 

How they operate:
Establishment of the flying squad is part of a commitment WWF made to the local village to help protect their crops from elephant raids before the national park was established. The squad is on-call 24 hours a day, but the normal routine is to conduct patrols by elephants and vehicles several times each week. 

The squad uses a variety of techniques to drive off crop-raiding elephants. Mahouts will first set off noisemakers to scare away the elephants, using "cannons" made of PVC pipes loaded with carbide that makes a loud boom when lit. If this does not work, the mahouts use trained elephants to drive the wild elephant back to the forested area. 

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WWF Experts

 

Barney Long

Senior Program Officer
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"The most satisfying thing is seeing our field projects have greater impact as a result of my support. Whether it’s by helping them secure funding or by giving technical input to develop a new approach to a conservation problem - that's what I am here for."

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