Gabon forest elephant forays into villages spark ire

"The solution to get rid of the pachyderms is to kill them," said Kevin Balondoboka, who lives in Bakoussou, a mere scattering of wooden huts in the sprawling, lush forest.

Villagers across the central African country live in fear of close encounters with elephants, whether on the road, going to wash in the river or especially in fields where they grow their crops.

Strict conservation policies have made Gabon "the refuge of forest elephants", Lea-Larissa Moukagni, who heads the human-wildlife conflict program at the National Agency of National Parks (ANPN) said.

African forest elephants, which inhabit the dense rainforests of west and central Africa, are smaller than their African savanna elephant cousins.

Poaching for ivory and have led to a decline over decades in their numbers and now list the African forest elephant as critically endangered.

But that does not stop villagers from viewing the animals as a pervasive problem.

With a population of 95,000 elephants compared to two million inhabitants, the issue is a "real" one, said Aime Serge Mibambani Ndimba, a senior official in the ministry of the environment, climate and—recently added—human-wildlife conflict.

Forest elephants are sparking ire by wandering into villages in Gabon and destroying crops.

To protect crops, Gabon has experimented with electric fences, not to kill but to "psychologically impact the animal" and repel it.

Climate change is affecting the plants and food available to forest elephants.

Villagers across Gabon live in fear of close encounters with elephants, especially in fields where they grow their crops, often damaged by the animals.