{"id":12426,"date":"2017-12-04t10:20:45","date_gmt":"2017-12-04t10:20:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/the-buzz-about-elephants-using-bees-to-protect-crops\/"},"modified":"2023-02-28t18:35:56","modified_gmt":"2023-02-28t18:35:56","slug":"bees-protect-crops-elephants","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/bees-protect-crops-elephants\/","title":{"rendered":"the buzz about elephants: using bees to protect crops"},"content":{"rendered":"
jazson julius gazed across the hilly landscape of the tanzanian highlands, clutching a well-weathered walking stick in one hand as he gestured to a farm on the next hill over. visible from across a misty valley was a field of pigeon peas with two thick, muddy paths slashed through the yellow stalks. \u201ctembo,\u201d julius explained simply \u2014 \u201celephant.\u201d then, he pointed to a stretch of forest bordering the ridge above the farms and said, \u201cngorongoro conservation area.\u201d it was not difficult to fill in the blanks. as we walked through the neighboring farms, trampled stalks, eaten branches, and more massive footprints revealed those farms that, like the first, were visited by destructive elephants in the night.<\/p>\n
kilimatembo \u2014 which translates to \u201chill of elephants\u201d \u2014 is far from the only village struggling with issues of human-elephant conflict. crop-raiding by elephants has become a pressing issue in areas bordering protected land, leading to reduced crop yields, a negative perception of elephants in local communities, and, in some cases, injuries and deaths of both humans and elephants as farmers are forced to confront these giants head-on.<\/p>\n
bees may be the shockingly small and simple solution to this problem. while tiny in stature, these insects pack quite a punch, especially where elephants are concerned. elephants tend to avoid areas where bees are prevalent, seemingly because the sensitive skin around their eyes, ears, and trunk gives them a nasty predisposition towards painful stings. jumping off from this idea, lucy king of save the elephants<\/u><\/a>, an ngo devoted to minimizing human-elephant conflicts, developed a beehive fence for use in african farmsteads, which is quickly being adopted throughout africa and asia.<\/p>\n