ASEAN

Can dung analysis save Laos tuskers?

SAINYABULI: Slow and silent, former logging elephant Mae Khoun Nung emerges from a forest in northern Laos and follows her guide to an animal hospital for a check-up.

Once abundant in the forests of Laos, the Asian elephant population have been decimated by habitat destruction, labour in the logging industry, poaching and scarce breeding opportunities.

But conservationists are hoping DNA analysis of elephants' dung will help them track both captive and wild tuskers, so they can secure a healthy genetic pool and craft an effective breeding plan to protect the species.

Laos —once proudly known as "Lane Xang" or "Land of a Million Elephant s" — now has between 500 and 1,000 of the animals left, just one-third of the population two decades ago, according to conservation group World Wildlife Fund (WWF)-Laos.

Around 10 elephants die each year for every one to two born, a rate that puts the animals at risk of dying out completely in the Southeast Asian nation.

"The ultimate goal would be to secure a healthy population of captive elephants to act as a genetic reservoir if the wild population collapses," wildlife biologist Anabel Lopez Perez said at her laboratory at the Elephant Conservation Centre (ECC) in Sainyabuli province.

Once researchers learn how many individual elephants are in the country by testing DNA containing cells in dung, Perez said a breeding plan will help them manage genetic diversity, prevent inbreeding and produce healthier calves that could be introduced into the wild.

At the ECC hospital, which shelters 28 elephants at its 500-hectare sanctuary, Mae Khoun Nung backs into a tall metal scaffolding structure, designed for check-ups on the animals.

Sounthone Phitsamone, who manages the centre's elephant keepers and acts as an assistant vet, taps the animal's leg and she calmly raises her foot for him to check.

Using a knife, he slices out the cracks and gaps in her hard, mudbaked nails.

Mae Khoun Nung spent her adult life in logging operations until she was given to the ECC by her owner in 2014 after work dried up and it became increasingly difficult to support her.

Elephants like her once roamed across much of Asia, but are now restricted to less than a fifth of their original range, according to WWF.

Their numbers in the wild have fallen by half since the early 1900s, with only 40,000 to 50,000 left, it said.

In the Nam Poui National Protected Area (NPA), researchers are now traversing the rugged hills and forests, collecting DNA from faecal samples of the area's 50 to 60 remaining wild elephants.

WWF-Laos, which is collaborating with the ECC and the Smithsonian Institution on the project, said the DNA analysis from dung would allow researchers to identify individual elephants, determine their sex, track their movements and understand familial relationships within herds.

"Although the Nam Poui NPA represents a significant habitat for one of the few large wild elephant populations remaining in Laos, we lack precise data about its composition," WWF-Laos said.

In 2018, a government ban on illegal logging—an industry that used elephants to haul timber out of forests — resulted in the animals being sent to work in the tourism sector, while others were sold off to zoos, circuses and breeders.

The ECC tries to buy and shelter captive elephants when they are put up for sale, but since 2010, just six pregnancies with three calves have resulted.

Many of the elephants at the centre are of an advanced age and in poor shape from years of arduous labour, Phitsamone said.

Mae Khoun Nung is 45 herself.

Phitsamone has worked at the elephant centre for more than a decade and has no illusions about how difficult it will be to save his country's gentle giants.

"If we compare Laos with other countries, the number of elephants in the database is small and is decreasing," he said.

"I don't know if it will be okay in 20 or 30 years." — AFP

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