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Distribution and abundance of African elephants in Ngorongoro Crater, northern Tanzania


John Kioko
Alanna Horton
Margo Libre
Jennifer Vickers
Emma Dressel
Heather Kasey
Pastory M Ndegeya
Donatus Gadiye
Bernard Kissui
Christian Kiffner

Abstract

We studied the distribution and abundance of African elephants in Ngorongoro Crater (NC), northern Tanzania to test whether male and female elephants select different habitats and to assess whether elephant abundance was related to monthly precipitation. From 2016 to 2017, we conducted thirteen total counts in the dry and wet seasons and collected data on elephant age, sex, social structure, and habitat use. Most elephants encountered in NC were male-only groups (70%). Elephant numbers were significantly greater in the wet season, compared with the dry season evidenced by a significant and positive linear relationship between elephant abundance and monthly rainfall. Elephants in the NC showed distinct sex segregation, with males preferring open habitats (swamps and grasslands) and female groups preferring closed habitats (bush-shrubland and Vachellia xanthophloea woodland). This study advances our understanding of elephant grouping patterns and sex-specific habitat usage in savannah ecosystems.


Keywords: habitat selection, Loxodonta africana, population structure, seasons, segregation, wildlife counts


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2224-073X
print ISSN: 1562-7020