INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Diamond Group De Beers said it is providing $500,000 to support anti-poaching efforts
(Representational)Johannesburg: Diamond producer De Beers said on Monday it was relocating 200 elephants from its private reserve in South
Africa to neighbouring Mozambique, part of wider efforts to restore wildlife populations ravaged by conflict there.The Anglo American unit
said its 32,000-hectare (80,000-acre) Venetia Limpopo Nature Reserve could support around 60 elephants but now had 270, causing "extensive
damage to an ecosystem that must sustain a diverse wildlife population."The world's largest land mammals have a jumbo-sized impact on their
terrain and in many South African parks, which are fenced to contain them, populations have reached levels where the vegetation cannot
support their numbers.De Beers said the elephants would be moved 1,500 km (1,000 miles) to Mozambique's Zinave National Park, which has over
400,000 hectares and an elephant population of only 60.Mozambique's wildlife numbers were badly hit by a 15-year civil war that ended in
In more recent years, its remaining elephant populations have been targeted by ivory poachers.The operation is being conducted with the
Peace Parks Foundation (PPF) conservation group, and De Beers said it was providing it with $500,000 to support anti-poaching
efforts."Ecosystems require a range of fauna and flora to stay balanced
If you remove one species, such as elephant, it has a ripple effect on the whole system," said Werner Myburgh, the chief executive of the
PPF."The reintroduction of elephants to Mozambique will bring us one step closer to achieving our dream of restoring the
landscape."Elephants are extremely social animals and family groups will be kept together for the translocation, a huge logistical
undertaking that will include darting operations and the movement of tranquilised animals over long distances by road.© Thomson Reuters