Collaring Radio Can Help Jumbos, Plants and Hosur Farmers – News2IN
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Collaring Radio Can Help Jumbos, Plants and Hosur Farmers

Collaring Radio Can Help Jumbos, Plants and Hosur Farmers
Written by news2in

This is Whammy Double: On the One Side of the Hosur Forest Division recorded an average of seven elephant deaths in the accident in the past five years, on the other hand the herd of elephant plants created tensions among villagers who suffered losses and search for government compensation plants for the government .
When we discussed the topic now, the villagers of Veppanahalli, Navanur, and Javalagiri in the Forest Division of Hosur keep their fingers cross, because almost 25 elephants, including several calves, are robbing plants in these villages.
The death of an elephant road accident and a plant raid by a herd is common and slightly done to track the movement of forest giants.
Solution is not difficult to find.
Raman Sukumar, Asiatic Elephant Expert and former Professor of the Indian Science Institute, Bengaluru, said animal radio-collaring can help reduce plant transmitter incidents, and Pachyderm who was killed while trying to cross the Chennai-Bengaluru highway near the Hosur Forest Division.
The Division of Hosur forest and a side by side is home to around 300 elephants.
Many of these animals regularly move to close-close carnataka forests and side by side with a series of small forest fillings north to the Chittoor Forest Andhra Pradesh.
The southern movement of these elephants took him to the Cauvery River.
Radio-colline from elephants that revolves around the habitat of the Division of North Hosur Forest that is very important to overtake elephant events in the conflict area or around high-risk areas such as highways, place of habitation and plant fields, Sukumar said.
Radio-collaring must be made to prevent victims of human-elephants in pro-active and also to limit their movements to live in the north in the state of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, he said.
Elephant birds range in more adjacent habitats closer to Cauvery wildlife asylum in the South Hosur Forest Division will assist in understanding habitat use and decision making about the elephant population and to develop the movement and model of habitat use for all populations.
The average flock size recorded in this region is around 10 and, sometimes, they range from a group size of 70, especially during the planting season.
By underestimating several certain adult women, one will, in fact, can collect fine-scale information on a large sub-set of populations.
Male adults are known to have a high tendency to move to fragmented landscapes in this region.
Those who use small and large forest patches in the fragile corridor are dissected with collared highways, so as to provide information about their dining area and breeding.
It gives an overview of the corridor that needs to be secured, he said.
When asked, a wildlife official said Tamil Nadu had nodded for radio – gathering a herd in the Hosur Forest Division, and that it was waiting for the UNI Minister of Environment.

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