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Battle to save Africa’s elephants is gaining some ground

The elephant staggered and keeled over in the tall grass in southern Tanzania, where some of the world’s worst poaching has happened.

It wasn’t a killer who targeted her but a conservation official, immobilizing her with a dart containing drugs. Soon she was snoring loudly, and they propped open her trunk with a twig to help her breathe. They slid a 26-pound (12-kilogram) GPS tracking collar around the rough skin of her neck and injected an antidote, bringing her back to her feet. After inspecting the contraption with her trunk, she ambled back to her family herd.

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a team of wildlife veterinarians use a 4x4 vehicle and a rope to turn over a tranquilized elephant in order to attach a GPS tracking collar and remove the tranquilizer dart, in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

The operation was part of a yearlong effort to collar and track 60 elephants in and around Tanzania’s Selous Game Reserve, widely acknowledged as ‘Ground Zero’ in the poaching that has decimated Africa’s elephants in recent years. The Associated Press traveled to the area to witness how the battle to save the continent’s elephants is gaining some momentum, with killings declining and some herds showing signs of recovery. Legal ivory markets are shrinking worldwide, and law enforcement has broken up some key trafficking syndicates, say experts.

But it’s far too early to declare a turnaround. Poachers are moving to new areas and traffickers are adapting, aided by entrenched corruption. The rate of annual elephant losses still exceeds the birth rate. And the encroachment of human settlements is reducing the animals’ range.

“The trend in poaching is going in the right direction, but we have a long way to go before we can feel comfortable about the future for elephants,” said Chris Thouless of Save the Elephants, a group based in Kenya, where elephant numbers are rising again.

In this photo taken Tuesday, March 20, 2018, two young elephants play in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In a move to crack down on demand, Britain this month announced a ban on ivory sales. In China, trade in ivory and ivory products is illegal as of 2018. And in the U.S., a ban on ivory apart from items older than 100 years went into place in 2016.

If poaching can be brought under control here in Tanzania, there is hope that the killing of elephants can be stemmed elsewhere on the continent.

Africa’s elephant population has plummeted from millions around 1900 to at least 415,000 today. Intelligent and emotional, with highly developed social behavior, elephants have been hunted for their ivory for centuries. A ban on commercial trade in ivory across international borders went into effect in 1990, but many countries continued to allow the domestic buying and selling of ivory.

In this photo taken Friday, March 23, 2018, wildlife veterinarian Ernest Mjingo, center, runs as an elephant starts to charge toward him after being darted with a tranquilizer during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars, near Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Increased demand from consumers in China fueled a new wave of killings.

In Tanzania alone, the elephant population declined by 60 percent to 43,000 between 2009 and 2014, according to the government. Much of the slaughter happened in an ecosystem comprising the Selous and the adjacent Mikumi National Park. A tourist guide told The Associated Press that several years ago, he and a client saw an elephant family at sunset in the Selous reserve. They returned the next day to the ghastly sight of carcasses of elephants slaughtered for their tusks.

The killings in Tanzania appear to have slowed down. A count in the Selous-Mikumi area last year added up 23 carcasses of poached elephants, just 20 percent of the number found four years earlier. And African elephant poaching has declined to pre-2008 levels after reaching a peak in 2011, according to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

In this photo taken Tuesday, March 20, 2018, a small herd of elephants are seen from an airplane in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

It’s a positive trend, but there is speculation there is a dearth of elephants to kill in many areas.

“All the ‘easy’ elephants are dead,” said Drew McVey, East Africa manager for the WWF conservation group.

In Tanzania’s Selous region, more newborn elephants are visible and confident elephants are moving more widely outside unfenced, officially protected areas, said Edward Kohi, principal research officer with the state Tanzania Wildlife Research Institute and leader of the GPS collaring program funded by WWF. The collars are designed to allow rangers to track the movement of elephant herds, and then mobilize to protect them if they move into poaching hotspots. By receiving satellite-transmitted data on mobile phones, rangers could also intercept elephants that drift into a human settlement or fields of crops.

In this photo taken Friday, March 23, 2018, wildlife veterinarian Justin Shamancha prepares to shoot a tranquilizer dart at an elephant during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars to them, in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Adam Rajeta, a farmer and cattle herder living next to Mikumi park, said elephants sometimes cause havoc.

“During the harvesting season, they come close to our homes,” Rajeta said. “When they do, we beat drums and make noise to scare them and thus protect ourselves. Only with God’s mercy do they leave our neighborhood.”

There has also been movement to crack down on trafficking. Tanzanian President John Magufuli, who took office in 2015, took a hard line and authorities have arrested key suspects linked to trafficking syndicates.

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a dart containing the elephant tranquilizer etorphine hydrochloride strikes the side of an elephant during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars to them, in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

However, the fight against the illegal ivory trade is like squeezing a balloon — when gains are made in one area, such as Tanzania, the killings intensify in another spot, like Mozambique’s Niassa reserve to the south, which is linked to the Selous by a wildlife corridor. And international seizures of smuggled ivory appear to be as large as ever, a possible sign of hurried efforts by traffickers to move stockpiles before business gets too difficult.

Some poaching gangs in Niassa are Tanzanian and “there is a lot of movement across the border” that includes other illicit trade, including in timber and minerals, said James Bampton, Mozambique director for the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society. The group co-manages Niassa with the government.

There are probably fewer than 2,000 elephants in Niassa, Bampton said. That’s a small fraction of the estimated number a decade ago in Mozambique’s main elephant refuge. Periodic thefts of confiscated ivory and rhino horn in Mozambique also raise concerns about official collusion with traffickers.

In this photo taken Friday, March 23, 2018, wildlife veterinarian Ernest Mjingo walks toward a tranquilized elephant carrying a bottle of water to pour over its ears to keep it cool, during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Another worrying development is evidence of increased processing of ivory tusks into jewelry and trinkets within Africa, instead of the old method of shipping raw ivory out of the continent. This allows traffickers to transport ivory in smaller quantities that are hard to detect and avoids increased scrutiny of ivory-carving operations in Asia.

The challenges of protecting wildlife were apparent to AP journalists who traveled with the collaring team in Mikumi park next to the Selous reserve, a U.N. world heritage site.

Plans to deploy a helicopter to help spot and herd the elephants fell through. Vehicles got stuck in mud. One morning, a startled wildlife official sprinted to his vehicle after briefly entering a toilet labeled “Gents” at a dirt airstrip. A female lion who had been reclining in a stall sauntered out.

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a team of wildlife veterinarians use a 4x4 vehicle and a rope to turn over a tranquilized elephant in order to attach a GPS tracking collar and remove the tranquilizer dart, in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

The team sometimes tracked elephants on foot, studying big round footprints, broken branches and the freshness of elephant dung for clues to their whereabouts.

Just two out of a planned five elephants were collared over three days in the Mikumi park. The conservationists refrained from darting elephant matriarchs, instead choosing younger females that they know will follow the group. They also intend to collar often solitary bull elephants.

The elephants displayed their social bonds in one instance, retreating into a defensive circle after hearing the pop of the dart gun. When a female was hit, the others appeared to try to prop up their woozy companion before fleeing.

In this photo taken Thursday, March 22, 2018, a team of wildlife veterinarians carry a 12-kilogram (26-pound) GPS tracking collar as they walk through thick bush in search of an elephant to tranquilize and collar, near Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Suspected traffickers are a threat to more than elephants. In August 2017, conservationist Wayne Lotter, credited with helping Tanzanian authorities dismantle some ivory smuggling operations, was murdered in Dar es Salaam in an apparent hit. Eight people have been arrested for the murder, including two bank officials and several businessmen.

Tanzania’s Selous-Mikumi region is known as one of the biggest killing fields for African elephants, but the vast wilderness of about 23,000 square miles (60,000 square kilometers) still offers hope for the world’s biggest land animal.

In 50 to 100 years, said Kohi, the collaring team leader, “when the human population is skyrocketing, this will be one of the important areas for the conservation of elephants.”

In this Thursday, March 22, 2018 photo, Maasai youth herder Adam Rajeta, 18, carries one of his sheep back across a rickety wooden bridge as he returns from grazing them, near Mikumi National Park in Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a team of wildlife veterinarians prepare darts containing the elephant tranquilizer etorphine hydrochloride during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars to elephants in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Friday, March 23, 2018, a wildlife veterinarian stands over the trunk of a tranquilized elephant during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Saturday, March 24, 2018, wildlife rangers fly in a light airplane to spot elephants during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars to them, in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this Thursday, March 22, 2018 photo, a Maasai herder drives his cattle across a pond as he returns from grazing them, near Mikumi National Park in Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a tranquilized elephant lies on the ground during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, an armed wildlife ranger stands guard near a tranquilized elephant in case others approach, during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this photo taken Wednesday, March 21, 2018, a herd of elephants form a protective circle against a perceived threat, just after one was shot with a tranquilizer dart during an operation to attach GPS tracking collars in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

In this Friday, March 23, 2018 photo, young Maasai men relax and play a game of pool at a bar by the side of the road in the late afternoon at Mkata junction, near Mikumi National Park in Tanzania Friday, March 23, 2018. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

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Text from the AP news story, Battle to save Africa's elephants is gaining some ground, by Christopher Torchia.

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Photos by Ben Curtis