Save the Elephants

Save the Elephants Crisis Fund GPS collars that transmit data

A) Save the Elephants Crisis Fund GPS collars that transmit data

B) Save the Elephants Crisis Fund GPS collars that transmit data

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Save-the-Elephants
Save the Elephants Crisis

Earthtopomaps

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Move over, Fido collars aren’t just for dogs. In the first project of its kind in Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve.

WWF along with the Kenyan Wildlife Service and Narok County Council is now collaring elephants. Unlike your pooch’s neckwear, these sophisticated collars contain advanced.: GPS satellite tracking devices that allow scientists to monitor.

In real time, when and where individual animals are moving across the landscape.

That information is used to chart their vast habitat. Which not only helps researchers identify. And manage essential wildlife corridors, but also informs landscape-level conservation efforts and land-use policies especially when development pressure is high in areas that are critical for elephants. And though the collaring process is both labor-intensive and expensive, the effort is worth the payoff:. By revealing whether an elephant is active, stationary, or injured, the collars enable rangers to respond more quickly. And effectively to poaching incidents and human-elephant conflicts.

C) Save the Elephants Crisis Fund GPS collars that transmit data

During a weeklong exercise. A team of WWF researchers and experts set out to collar elephants in the Maasai Mara National Reserve. Since 2015. Eight elephants have been fitted with the devices. Which track their movements as they travel in and out of the protected area. But collaring an African elephant that can weigh up to seven tons is no easy task. The process requires a lot of time and planning. And no short supply of patience.

The experts drive to the western side of the Maasai Mara from Keekorok to the edge of Oloololo escarpment, where an eligible herd of elephants was previously identified.

During a weeklong exercise, a team of WWF researchers and experts set out to collar elephants in the Maasai Mara National Reserve. Since 2015, eight elephants have been fitted with the devices, which track their movements as they travel in and out of the protected area. But collaring an African elephant that can weigh up to seven tons is no easy task. The process requires a lot of time and planning—and no short supply of patience.

The experts drive to the western side of the Maasai Mara from Keekorok to the edge of Oloololo escarpment, where an eligible herd of elephants was previously identified.

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Unlike your pooch’s neckwear, these sophisticated collars contain advanced.: GPS satellite tracking devices that allow scientists to monitor.

Unlike your pooch’s neckwear, these sophisticated collars contain advanced.: GPS satellite tracking devices that allow scientists to monitor.

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