The Borneo pygmy elephant may not be native to the island of Borneo after
all. Instead, the population could be the last survivors of the Javan elephant
race - accidentally saved from extinction by the Sultan of Sulu centuries ago,
suggests an article co-authored by World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
The origins of the pygmy elephants, found only on the northeast tip of the
island in part of the Heart of Borneo, have long been shrouded in mystery. Their
looks and behavior differ from other Asian elephants and scientists have
questioned why they never dispersed to other parts of the island.
But today's paper, published in the peer-reviewed Sarawak Museum Journal,
supports a long-held local belief that the elephants were brought to Borneo
centuries ago by the Sultan of Sulu, now in the Philippines, and later abandoned
in the jungle. The Sulu elephants, in turn, are thought to have originated in
Java, an Indonesian island that is across the Javan Sea from Borneo.
"Just one fertile female and one fertile male elephant, if left
undisturbed in enough good habitat, could in theory end up as a population of
2,000 elephants within less than 300 years," said Junaidi Payne of World
Wildlife Fund, one of the paper's co-authors. "And that may be what
happened in practice here."
Javan elephants became extinct sometime in the period after Europeans arrived
in Southeast Asia. Elephants on Sulu, never considered native to the island,
were hunted out in the 1800s.
"Elephants were shipped from place to place across Asia many hundreds of
years ago, usually as gifts between rulers," said Mr. Shim Phyau Soon, a
retired Malaysian forester whose ideas on the origins of the elephants partly
inspired the current research. "It's exciting to consider that the
forest-dwelling Borneo elephants may be the last vestiges of a subspecies that
went extinct on its native Java Island, in Indonesia, centuries ago."
If the Borneo pygmy elephants are in fact elephants from Java, an island more
than 800 miles south of their current range, it could be the first known
elephant translocation in history that has survived to modern times, providing
scientists with critical data from a centuries-long experiment. Their possible
origins in Java make them even more a conservation priority.
Scientists solved part of the mystery in 2003, when DNA testing by Columbia
University and WWF found that the Borneo elephants were genetically distinct
from Sumatran or mainland Asian elephants, leaving either Borneo or -under this
new theory- Java as the most probable source.
The new paper, "Origins of the Elephants Elephas Maximus L. of
Borneo," shows that there is no archaeological evidence of a long-term
elephant presence on Borneo, thus making Java the possible source.
There are perhaps just 1,000 of the elephants in the wild, mostly in the
Malaysian state of Sabah. WWF has captured and placed satellite collars on 11
elephants since 2005 to track them since they had never been studied before. The
study has shown they prefer the same lowland habitat that is being increasingly
cleared for timber, rubber and palm oil plantations.
By satellite tracking of some of these elephants, WWF unknowingly may have
been investigating the history of a very old experiment: the introduction of
elephants from one island, where they eventually went extinct, to another, where
they are still alive, said Michael Stuewe, elephant biologist for World Wildlife
Fund.
"Unraveling the secrets of this experiment would be invaluable for
conservation as it would guide our efforts with many species that are facing
extinction today," Stuewe said. "I can only hope that the fierce
competition Borneo's elephants face from commercial plantation industries for
the forests they call their home does not interfere with their very
survival." |