To ensure that future interventions with a view to securing her wellbeing and solo existence, a Garden Route Elephant Management Plan was implemented in 2024 engaging leading minds in conservation of the species as well as stakeholders such as the local community. It was reported in the
Knysna-Plett Herald that “Once the risks and opportunities have been established, along with a better understanding of the complexities around elephant management in an unfenced socio-ecological system such as the Garden Route, then a clear plan will be put in place.” says
SANParks. • Possible interventions suggested have been to bring a captive or semi-tamed herd, or an orphaned calf or a wild herd from
Addo Elephant National Park in the Eastern Cape. The risk of this is the elephants suffering the stress of translocation; the potential of aggressive behaviour toward people or farmlands; the absence of fencing or that bonding doesn't take place successfully. • Following
filmmaker Ryan Davy's 12-week tracking of the elephant in 2023, he hoped to convince SANParks that a herd of elephants should be introduced to the Knysna forest to provide company for the lone female and to restore the ecosystem in the Knysna forest. He formed an action group called
Herd Instinct (HI) which, according to the Knysna-Plett Herald met on the 14 March 2024 in Knysna to galvanise support for a plan to introduce "three to five female elephants, between 10 and 35 years old, that presently live at the
Plettenberg Bay Game Reserve be moved into the Knysna forests." The group believes that the plan is urgent as "For a highly social and intelligent species like an elephant, this is essentially a sentence of solitary confinement. Considering her estimated age and circumstances of living, a measure of urgency is justified. The national norms and standards for the management of elephants (Nemba) says that every reasonable effort must be made to safeguard elephants from abuse and neglect. To leave a highly social and intelligent animal alone, deprived by human actions of a herd, is as definitive a form of neglect as imaginable and in blatant contravention of this. HI will thus continue to press forward and remains eager to work with the public and governing authorities to create positive change for Fiela" has indicated that it is
not in support of the initiative to introduce captive elephants to the Knysna forest and "favour SANParks’ cautious, non-invasive and scientific-based approach to the management of the Knysna forest elephant" due to concerns of vegetation not being optimal for a herd of elephants; and the potential risk of stress on all elephants . "PREN members are cognisant of all the factors that have culminated in the difficult life of the female elephant living in the Knysna forest. We would want to prevent any further complications or create any additional stress for her, and would rather see her live out her final few years in relative peace." • Moolman is quoted in Times Live stating: "If the status quo is kept, the risk will be that once the elephant dies her memory and knowledge of how to survive in the Knysna area will be lost, without an opportunity to pass on this knowledge and to teach another elephant (if bonding is a possibility)." • Plans to link the
Garden Route National Park, the Baviaanskloof World Heritage Site and
Addo Elephant National Park may also offer a resolve with Eden to Addo CEO Joan Berning stating that: "Lizette and I have become even more convinced through the elephant's behaviour in the Knysna forest how vital these corridors are for the safe movement of species." == A new book offers extensive history and research on The Knysna Elephants ==