
The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) unveiled in a statement on its website a "toolkit" it suggests should be taught or handed out to farmers, particularly in Africa, to stop them killing wildlife.
Competition between wild animals and humans is major source of

Elephants and baboons hemmed in by dwindling wilderness can devastate crops. Hungry lions can lay waste to cattle. "With the world's population growing at some 75 million a year, humans and wildlife are having to squeeze ever more tightly together, increasing the risk of conflict," it said.
In 2008 in an effort to combat this problem, Kenya launched an experimental program to use mobile phone technology and GPS to monitor elephants with a history of raiding crops outside their nature preserve.

For other angry farmers who often kill elephants that ruin their crops, the FAO has another suggestion: chili peppers. Apparently, elephants dislike


In the Zambezi valley in southern Zambia, small-scale farmers are growing chili peppers as a deterrent against elephants that raid their crops and marketing the peppers as an eco-friendly product.
The chilies also provide farmers with a cash crop. One farmer who lives

Kenyan donkeys, FAO notes, are aggressive in defending farm land against even animals a lot bigger than they are.
"Baboons which enter buildings to steal food may be scared off by placing a snake, preferably alive, inside a hollowed-out loaf of bread," the FAO statement said. In Mozambique, where crocodiles kill 300 people a year, proper fencing at watering points could save lives. Hippos can be deterred at night by a bright torch shinning at them.
"Whatever the specific measures taken, it is important that they are

The report does however note there are risks attached: hippos and elephants are extremely aggressive and can charge, so a gun might be a sensible back-up option.
Source:
Reuters, "Fight elephants with peppers, U.N. tells farmers", accessed July 19, 2010
National Geographic, "News: Elephant Pepper's Spicy Stab at Conservation", accessed July 19, 2010