Wild Tusker captured for treatment, released to the wild in Tamil Nadu's Mudumalai

Written By Sidharth MP | Updated: Aug 02, 2021, 11:26 PM IST

In a significant development, ‘Rivaldo’, a wild tusker that had been under captive treatment at a camp in the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, has been released into the jungle during the wee hours of Monday. Nearly three months ago, the Tamil Nadu Forest Department had captured the elephant, as it kept venturing into human habitations in search of food. It was suspected that the elephant had an injury, which prevented it from feeding in the wild. 

In a significant development, ‘Rivaldo’, a wild tusker that had been under captive treatment at a camp in the Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, has been released into the jungle during the wee hours of Monday. Nearly three months ago, the Tamil Nadu Forest Department had captured the elephant, as it kept venturing into human habitations in search of food. It was suspected that the elephant had an injury, which prevented it from feeding in the wild. 


Mudumalai Tiger Reserve, located in the ecologically sensitive Nilgiris district in Tamil Nadu, is at the tri-junction of Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka. It is home to a wide variety of flora and fauna. Animals such as tigers, leopards, elephants, Indian Gaur (bison), sloth bears are often sighted at the Reserve.


On being captured, Rivaldo was put into a ‘kraal’ (a wooden log enclosure specially made for treating elephants). Generally, elephants that are put into a kraal are trained and domesticated for use as semi-wild elephants. They are either placed in forest department-run camps as Safari elephants or as Kumki elephants (trained elephants used to tame/control other elephants). Being put in a Kraal has often meant the end of a wild elephant’s natural way of life.


In this case, based on inputs from multiple committees and expert opinion, it was decided to rehabilitate the tusker into a suitable location in the wild. Based on the discussions and plans drawn up over the last 25 days, a team from the Forest Department had transferred the elephant from the kraal to a customized vehicle. The operation which began at 3 am on Monday, involved moving the truck-borne elephant slowly to an ideal location (a journey of nearly 35kms), with adequate safety measures in place. 


According to Supriya Sahu, IAS, Principal Secretary, Environment and Forests, TN, the radio-collared tusker was released into the wild at around 9:30 am. “We have used a German-made radio collar that is linked with satellites for providing hourly location updates on the elephant. Our monitoring centre gets the signal every hour and we get to know how far he has travelled and the exact location. This helps ensure the tusker's safety and track its movement in the wild” she added. 


Officials had to follow multiple procedures and protocols in ensuring that the captive wild tusker gets suitably, comfortably rehabilitated. It began with the crucial medical examination to determine whether the tusker required further treatment or whether it had to be held captive permanently or whether it could be released back into its natural habitat. 


“An 8-member expert committee formed for this purpose told us that the elephant was fine, no further treatment was required. It was also added that there was no reason to keep it in a camp. We then formed multiple committees to work on the scientific methods of rehabilitation, such as -treatment, collaring, tracking etc.” said Tamil Nadu Chief Wildlife Warden Dr Shekhar Kumar Niraj, IFS. He added that it was a sensitive operation involving 100 staffers of the department, hence necessitating that it was kept away from public glare.


Referring to the possibility of similar rehabilitation efforts for other captive elephants, Mrs Supriya Sahu said that the department would take best efforts to get captive animals back to the wild, as they cannot be forced to live in an artificial setting. “In Karnataka, they rehabilitated a wild elephant that was in captivity for a very long time. Likewise, we will analyze the parameters and see what is possible. We are open to the idea”, she said, expressing confidence.


She assured meticulous, scientific decision-making that would keep animal welfare an utmost priority. She also revealed that man-animal conflict had come to an all-time low during COVID-19 lockdowns, as people were confined at homes. Regarding the two-pronged approach to wildlife management, she said that scaling-up of rescue-treatment-rehab facilities for animals was underway, besides the awareness drives for the local populace.