Home Project-material HIPPOS AND HUMANS: HUMAN-WILDLIFE CONFLICT AT THE KIRI DAM, NORTHEASTERN NIGERIA

HIPPOS AND HUMANS: HUMAN-WILDLIFE CONFLICT AT THE KIRI DAM, NORTHEASTERN NIGERIA

Dept: ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE File: Word(doc) Chapters: 1-5 Views:

Abstract

Globally, human-wildlife conflict is increasing due to increased encroachment by human populations into natural habitats. The hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibious) is often involved in human-wildlife conflict in Africa. This conflict is a major threat to hippos, which are classified as Vulnerable by the IUCN. Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa, has a relatively small number of hippos – estimated at 300 individuals. I investigated the perceptions and attitudes of local people toward a resident population of hippopotami in the Kiri Dam reservoir on the Gongola River in northeastern Nigeria. I used semi-structured interviews (n = 3) with government officials and key informants and questionnaires (n = 69) with residents in two villages (Kiri and Baban Daba). I found that very few respondents (7%) saw benefits to the presence of hippos in the area, while nearly all respondents said hippos cause problems, such as damaging crops, disrupting fishing, and threatening live
INTRODUCTION

Because interactions between humans and wildlife have played a role in the

evolution of humankind, conflicts between humans and wild animals have been in

existence since they have shared resources and landscape (Lamarque et al., 2009).

Ancient humans were hunter-gatherers, and they relied on nature such as plants and

animals surrounding them. Humans and wild animals interacted in various ways; for

example, wildlife was a major source of food (protein) for human populations. The

interests of humans and those of wildlife often clash, however, resulting in negative

interactions. Such interactions between humans and wildlife are often referred to as

human-wildlife conflict.

Human-wildlife conflict results from competition between human and wildlife

populations over space or resources (Lamarque et al., 2009), such as when the

requirements of human populations overlap with the requirements of wildlife

populations (IUCN, 2005). Although the word “conflict” has various meanings, the

way “conflict” is defined and understood determines the nature of human-wildlife

conflict. Human-wildlife conflict often reflects a struggle between two or more

parties or groups over some perceived wanted factors, resulting from differences in

actions of the parties involved (Onuoha, 2008). An example of such is the struggle

over crops between elephants (Loxodonta africana) and farmers (De Boer &

Baquete, 1998; Geoffrey, 2015; Granados & Weladji, 2012; Naughton, Rose, &

Treves, 1999; Nyhus & Tilson, 2004; Vidya & Thuppil, 2010; Warner, 2008), when

elephants raid farms and damage or destroy crops cultivated by farmers.

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The major forces driving human-wildlife conflict differ from one location to another,

but when studied as a whole, these forces can be classified into two categories: 1)

factors attributed to human population growth and human activities, and 2) factors

related to an increase in wildlife abundance. Human population growth is at the core

of most environmental problems, as well as a major cause of negative humanwildlife interactions. This is particularly so in Africa, which has the fastest

population growth in the world; more than half of the world population growth

between now and 2050 is expected to come from Africa (UN, 2015). One African

nation, Nigeria, is the 7th most populous country in the world, and it is expected to

be the third largest country in the world by 2050 (UN, 2015).

Human population growth results in the conversion of forests, savannas, and other

ecosystems into agricultural sites and urban cluster (Distefano, 2005). Wildlife is

thus affected by habitat loss, degradation, and fragmentation. Animal populations

grow only when there are resources to sustain them; human populations are not an

exception to this rule. The increasing human demand for meat is one reason for a

global increase in domestic livestock populations. This growth may lead to

competitive exclusion of wild herbivores. Increasing human population growth in

Africa has led to human encroachment into wildlife habitats, restricting species into

smaller and fewer habitat patches and fueling competition with local communities

(Distefano, 2005). This means that wildlife more often comes into contact with

humans, and this leads to increased conflict.

Conflict between human and wildlife come in different forms. The most common

forms attacks on humans, crop raiding, and property destruction by wildlife

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(Lamarque et al., 2009). Negative human-wildlife interactions have impacts and

consequences. Crop destruction, where wild animals consume, trample, or otherwise

damage crops, is the most prevalent problem posed by human-wildlife interaction

across Africa (Lamarque et al., 2009). One of the major impacts of crop raiding is

that it threatens local people’s source of food for both subsistence and commercial

needs (Quirin & Dixon, 2012).

In Rwanda, forest-dwelling primates, especially the chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes)

and Cercopithecus monkeys, caused an average 10-20% loss in household income as

a result of crop raiding (McGuinness & Taylor, 2014). In a study carried out in four

villages in Uganda, 11 species of large vertebrate damaged 6.1 km

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over three

farming seasons (Webber & Hill, 2014). The elephant and common hippopotamous

(Hippopotamus amphibious) are the most destructive crop raiders in Africa. They

particularly affect the livelihoods of subsistence African farmers because they cause

significant damage (Lamarque et al., 2009). Farmers find it difficult to deal with

raiding by elephants and hippos because these animals are large; aggressive; and, in

the case of hippos, nocturnal. They cause highly visible damage, and governments

provide little or no compensations in most cases (Lamarque et al., 2009). Even

though reports of crop raiding by elephants and hippos are common, the damage

caused by smaller mammals, such as baboons (Papio spp.), bush pig

(Potamochoerus porcus), and monkeys (Cercopithecus spp.), may be even greater.

Compared to hippos, for instance, these species are less conspicuous, and thus

reports of raiding by these smaller mammals might be underreported (Dunham,

Ghiurghi, Cumbi, & Urbano, 2010; Granados & Weladji, 2012).

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Crop-raiding activities by wildlife are also a major obstacle to wildlife conservation

efforts, affecting both unprotected and protected areas. In Yankari Game Reserve in

northeastern Nigeria, crop raiding by elephants in villages surrounding the reserve

poses the biggest challenge to conservation of animals in the reserve (Geoffrey,

2015). In response to destruction caused by the elephants, for instance, communities

living around the reserve retaliate by killing elephants.

At times, wild animals directly attack humans, and these attacks may result in

injuries or even death. Both carnivorous species, such as lions (Panthera leo), and

herbivorous species, such as hippos, attack humans. In Africa, crocodiles

(Crocodylus spp.), lions, elephants, and hippos pose the most serious threat to human

lives (Lamarque et al., 2009). Until 2011, hippos accounted for one-quarter of all

deaths caused by wildlife across the continent (Kendall, 2011). Today, attacks by

crocodiles are more common and account for the most deaths caused by large

animals in Africa. It has been suggested that the increasing number of attacks by

crocodiles is due to the abundance of crocodiles across the continent (Lamarque et

al., 2009). In Mozambique, 118 people are killed by wildlife every year on average,

and crocodiles are responsible for two-thirds of these deaths (Dunham et al., 2010).

Property destruction by wildlife can also lead to human-wildlife conflict. Crocodiles

attack and consume livestock, for example, thus leading to loss of a food and income

source for local people (Treves & Naughton-Treves, 1999). In Mozambique, one

study showed that, in decreasing order of magnitude, lions, crocodiles, hyenas, and

elephants killed 301 livestock animals (Dunham et al., 2010). In addition, wildlife

can disturb economic activities such as fishing, and crop raiding may lead to smaller

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crop harvests and thus loss of income (DeBoer & Baquete, 1998; Granados &

Weladji, 2012; Hill, 2015; Pérez & Pacheco, 2006; Thapa, 2010). These economic

impacts are augmented by social costs. For example, children may stay home from

school to guard farms, and both children and adults may lose sleep to stay up a night

to watch over farms (Barua, Bhagwat, & Jadhav, 2013).

Although crocodiles are currently responsible for more human deaths than are

hippos, hippos more often raid crops (Fig. 1). Regardless, hippos are dangerous

animals that pose a threat to human populations living or working near them,

especially along rivers where hippos occur (Dunham et al., 2010). Attacks by hippos

are not often deliberate; these attacks tend to occur when humans are protecting their

crops, when humans encounter an animal on their pathway or near water in the night,

or when humans come in contact with injured animals or whose sense is impaired

(Lamarque, et al., 2009). Hippos can cause substantial damage to crops when raiding

Fig. 1. Hippos are mega-herbivores that consume primarily grass. However, they are known

to raid crops, especially at night when they are most active. Photo: Dreamscope Photography

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farms at night. Humans may react by killing the specific problem animals or hunting

any of the animals to retaliate or reduce the total population of the animals (Kendall,

2011). Hippos, in addition to elephants and crocodiles, are thus the most frequently

killed animals as a result of conflict (Dunham et al., 2010). For example, the ratio of

hippos killed to the number of their human victims is one of the highest relative to

ratios for other wildlife. For every human killed by a hippo, 2.3 hippos are killed by

people (Dunham et al., 2010).

In terms of their ecological impact, hippos have both positive and negative effects.

For example, they may damage water resources, hippos are known to contaminate

drinking water with organic matter, or transmit diseases to humans and livestock.

Hippos have been associated with the spread of anthrax in Queen Elizabeth and Lake

Mburo National Parks in Rwanda (Wafula, Patrick, & Charles, 2007). On the other

hand, the large body size of hippos makes them important key players in ecosystems;

they create habitat for small species and are a keystone species (Mosepele, Moyle,

Merron, Purkey, & Mosepele, 2009, as cited in Mason, 2013). Daily movement of

hippos from water to land form paths creating an avenue through which water flows

during the dry season. During droughts, these flooded paths turn to lagoons and side

pools that provide habitat to small fishes. Hippos are also known to be important

vectors, transporting millions of tons of organic matter from their feeding ground to

aquatic water annually; this organic matter improves the performance of some of the

aquatic animals and plants in the water (McCauley et al., 2015).

In Nigeria, hippos face increasing pressure due to the country’s rapidly growing

human population, coupled with increasing habitat loss and degradation, pollution,

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and other threats. The distribution of hippos in Nigeria is restricted to the drier

northern region (Lewison & Oliver, 2008), including Yankari Game Reserve in

Bauchi State (Geoffrey, 2015), Dadin Kowa Dam in Gombe State (Umar, 2015), and

Kiri Dam in Adamawa State (Igidi, 2014). In the Kiri Dam area, some local

communities reported the destruction of farms, disturbance of fishing activities, as

well as injuries and killings caused by hippos, and the government then gave

permission to kill problem animals (Igidi, 2014). In August 2015, news media

reported that the Nigerian military killed a problem hippo in Dadin-Kowa Dam after

local people complained to the state government that the hippo killed people and

destroyed crops and fishing tools (Umar, 2015) (Fig. 2).

Populations of hippos have declined by

the range of 7 to 20% over the last

decade as a result of habitat loss and

illegal and unregulated hunting for meat

and ivory, as estimated by IUCN Redlist

(Lewison & Oliver, 2008). Following the

international ban on elephant ivory in

1989, illegal trading in hippo ivory

sharply increased: Between 1991 and

1992, 27,000 kg of hippo teeth were

exported; this is double the amount

exported in 1989 and 1990. The

dependence of hippos on freshwater also makes them more vulnerable to habitat loss

given the increasing pressure on and demand for freshwater across Africa (Cosgrove

Fig. 2. Problem hippo killed at the DadinKowa Dam in Gombe State, August 2015.

Photo: Bima Ismail

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& Rijsberman, 2000). Consequently, hippos are now classified as a threatened

species and were listed as Vulnerable in 2006 (Lewison & Oliver, 2008).

Using mixed social research methods, I investigated hippo-human conflict at the Kiri

Dam reservoir in Adamawa State. My goal was to determine the perceptions and

views of hippos by local people living around the Kiri reservoir. I sought to better

understand how local communities view and respond to problems caused by hippos

and whether they perceived any benefits due to the presence of hippos. In addition, I

made comparisons with a similar study conducted in the area in 2007 (Teneke,

2007). Finally, I intended this study to contribute to the mitigation measures to

reduce hippo-human conflict at the Kiri Dam reservoir and to improve protection of

the hippo population at this site


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