https://indianmasterminds.com

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Trenches, Solar Fences Keeping Elephants Away From Tamil Hamlets

Forest Range officer S Sathish and his team have come up with innovative ideas to keep elephants away from agricultural fields. He is providing triple-layered protection including trenches and solar fences to the village. Bamboo and fruit trees have been planted in the forest to keep pachyderms happy.
Indian Masterminds Stories

One of the most difficult challenges a forest officer faces is the unfavourable interactions between wildlife and human activity, which can result in agricultural damage, property damage, and even the loss of human lives. Because of the degradation of natural habitats and the increase in human populations, effective management techniques to alleviate such conflicts and promote cohabitation between humans and wildlife are required.

In the Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve, under the guidance of Field Director, Mr. S. Ramasubramaniyam, IFS, and Deputy Director, Hasanur division, Mr. Devendra Kumar Meena, IFS, Forest Range officer Mr. S. Sathish has come up with innovative ways to mitigate man-animal conflict in the region and provide immediate relief to the victims involved.

Inspecting crop damage by elephants

NECESSITY

The Sathyamangalam Tiger Reserve (STR) is bordered by a number of enclaved hamlet communities where the locals raise cash crops like bananas. Elephants from the surrounding area are drawn to these cash crops, causing extensive damage to crops. 

The government compensates farmers whose crops are damaged by elephants in the tiger reserve with Rs. 25,000 per acre, depending on the extent of the damage. However, two people have died in the region in the last two years as a result of man-animal conflict. These farmers were trampled by elephants who were trying to drive them away.

This caused major concern, prompting the forest department to conclude that significant actions must be taken in the area to avoid disputes between the two sides and assist them in coexisting with each other.

Mr.S. Ramasubramaniyam Inspecting Elephant intrusion points from reserved forest to Farming land

ELEPHANT TRENCHES

The first step taken by the forest department was to dig elephant-proof trenches along the nearly 12-kilometre stretch of the border between the Reserve and the village settlement. This contributed to a 60% reduction in the issue of elephants wandering into agricultural fields.

The officer and his crew identified a few hotspots that were the major channel of elephants’ regular migration into the settlement and installed double-layered protection in those areas, including elephant-proof trenches and hanging solar power fences to keep the animals at bay. 

COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION

The officer and his team personally met with the farmers of the village settlement who requested them to settle down the issues caused by stray elephants. He explained to them the different methods and techniques adopted by the forest department to keep the animals away from human habitat and also raised awareness regarding elephant movement with them so that no other person gets hurt and loses life because of the jumbos.

“Much to our surprise and happiness, the farmers came together and contributed six lakhs out of the 16 lakhs expenditure on the solar fencing equipment. The remaining 10 lakhs were sanctioned to us by the government. This prompted a good example of community-departmental collaboration, thus mitigating the man-animal conflicts by 95%. The double-layered protection is giving very good results,” shared Mr. Sathish.

“After the successful implementation of four-kilometre solar fencing, people are now coming forward to instal an additional 2.5-kilometre solar fence, with collaboration from the local farmers, under which Rs. 3 lahks is contributed by the farmers and Rs. 6 lakhs is contributed by the department,” shared the forest officials from the Satyamangalam Tiger Reserve.

WORKING INSIDE THE RESERVE

Elephants from the Tiger Reserve frequently stray outside of their home range in search of food and water. To prevent the animals from being forced to travel farther in their search, the officer is also working on this front to ensure that they have plenty of water and food nearby.

“We are focusing on creating several check dams, desilting the percolation ponds, and constructing new manmade ponds, among other things,” shared the officer.

Solar fencing opened by Mr.Devendra Kumar Meena, IFS,

In order to increase the amount of vegetation in forested regions, the department is also clearing the reserve of about 100 acres of invasive species like lantanacamara and sowing native seeds and seed balls in the area. The water level in the Tiger Reserve has also risen, and now there is enough water there to quench the thirst of the animals.

“We plan to increase some fruit-bearing indigenous trees, as well, along with bamboo trees for the elephants.”

THREE LAYERED PROTECTIONS

The officer intends to erect bio fencing in the area, consisting of cactus plants that will be planted all along the boundary, in addition to trenches and solar fencing. Elephant incursion will be considerably reduced as a result of this. The department is already looking for sturdy, high-quality cactus plants, to be planted in the area.

Despite their efforts, the jumbos, sometimes, venture out during the night and damage the crops. Therefore, the Department has now decided to deploy kumkis (trained elephants) to drive the problematic elephants back into the forest region and away from the farming lands.

Giving awareness messages in villages regarding elephant movement

“The elephants are no longer viewed as enemies by the population. They are coexisting with them peacefully while protecting their crops with our support. We are attempting to educate them that growing cash crops close to the forest area may draw animals, thus they should avoid doing so,” Mr. Sathish told Indian Masterminds.

The officer has also created a dedicated chat group on WhatsApp called ‘Elephant Cell’ in which he has added around 500 farmers from in and around his range. Through this WhatsApp group, he is able to receive timely information about the intrusion of an elephant in farming fields prompting him to deploy his Anti Depredation squad, as quickly as possible. The members of the squad reach the field in their vehicles, in no time, and drive the elephants safely back to the forest areas. The chat group has proved to be quite beneficial in terms of elephant management and bringing relief to farmers.


Indian Masterminds Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Related Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
NEWS
Abhishek Prakash IAS
Uttar Pradesh Govt Reinstates IAS Officer Abhishek Prakash as Secretary in General Administration Department
high court of Telangana
Telangana High Court Dismisses LS Chowhan’s Challenge to IPS Promotion Process
Special Courts for Bank Fraud Cases
Banks Report 40% Drop in Microfinance Portfolio in Q3 FY26 as NBFC-MFIs Gain Market Share
Indian Bank
Indian Bank Receives AAA Rating from CARE and CRISIL for ₹5,000 Crore Infrastructure Bonds
bob
Bank of Baroda Wins CII HR Excellence Award for Outstanding HR Practices and Employee Engagement
VEDA Aeronautics and RailTel MoU
RailTel Wins ₹42.63 Crore NICSI Contract for New Core Link Under National Knowledge Network Project
Rare Illustrated Manuscripts
Bihar Showcases Rare Illustrated Manuscripts on Buddha’s Teachings in Patna Exhibition
Agro Bihar 2026
Agro Bihar 2026 Concludes in Patna: 35,000+ Farmers Explore Modern Agricultural Machinery
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Videos
WhatsApp Image 2026-03-16 at 4.18
What Happens After Terror Strikes? Surinder Choudhary Explains the Reality of Counter-Terror Operations
beno zephine
India’s First Visually Impaired IFS Officer on Diplomacy, Inclusion and Changing the System
WhatsApp Image 2026-03-02 at 10.22
Beno Zephine: India’s First 100% Visually Challenged IFS Officer Who Rewrote the Rules of Diplomacy | EXCLUSIVE
ADVERTISEMENT
UPSC Stories
UPSC CSE 2025
What Makes UPSC 2025 Top-20 Tick
Behind the ranks of UPSC CSE 2025 lies a story of the quiet emergence of students of arts and engineering...
UPSC CSE 2025 Sanjay S
Raised by a Tailor Mother and Fruit-Seller Grandmother, Sanjay S. Achieves AIR 953 in UPSC 2025 | Exclusive
Hearing-impaired candidate Sanjay S. secures AIR 953 in the UPSC Civil Services Examination 2025 after...
UPSC CSE 2025
Raised by a Sanitation Worker After Losing His Parents, Dainampelly Praveen Cracks UPSC with AIR 793 | Exclusive
After losing both parents and growing up under the care of his sanitation worker grandmother, Dainampalli...
Social Media
One-Horned Rhino Calf
Watch: First One-Horned Rhino Calf of 2026 Takes Birth at Jaldapara National Park, IFS Officer Shares Rare Footage
A newborn one-horned rhinoceros calf was spotted at Jaldapara National Park on January 1, 2026. IFS officer...
venomous banded krait
Rare Night Encounter: IFS Officer Spots Highly Venomous Banded Krait During Forest Patrol, Internet Amazed
An IFS officer’s night patrol video of a highly venomous banded krait has gone viral, highlighting India’s...
elephant rescue Karnataka
Heroic Karnataka Elephant Rescue: How a 28-Hour “Impossible Mission” Became a Triumph of Wildlife Care, IFS Parveen Kaswan Shares Video
A trapped elephant was rescued after 28 hours in Karnataka through a massive, expertly coordinated Forest...
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Latest
Abhishek Prakash IAS
Uttar Pradesh Govt Reinstates IAS Officer Abhishek Prakash as Secretary in General Administration Department
high court of Telangana
Telangana High Court Dismisses LS Chowhan’s Challenge to IPS Promotion Process
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Videos
WhatsApp Image 2026-03-16 at 4.18
beno zephine
WhatsApp Image 2026-03-02 at 10.22
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT