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Iain Douglas-Hamilton, elephant protector, has died at 83

  • Iain Douglas-Hamilton was a pioneering elephant researcher who spent nearly 60 years studying Africa’s elephants, beginning in Tanzania’s Lake Manyara National Park with the first scientific study of elephant behavior in the wild.
  • A leading voice against the ivory trade, he helped drive the 1989 global ban after witnessing devastating population declines in the 1970s and 1980s.
  • As founder of Save the Elephants, he advanced GPS tracking and new conservation strategies that transformed protection efforts across Africa.
  • Also a mentor and advocate, Douglas-Hamilton is celebrated for his communication skills and unwavering belief that protecting elephants is a generational responsibility — a mission that continues through the people and systems he helped build.

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For nearly six decades, Iain Douglas-Hamilton worked across the savannas of Africa, his scientific focus fixed on its largest inhabitants — the elephants. It was said he could identify an elephant by the pattern of its ears or the wrinkles in its skin. He liked to note that elephants were like people — capable of deep social bonds and flashes of temper. Douglas-Hamilton, who passed away on December 8th, 2025, at the age of 83, devoted his life to ensuring that they had a future.

Born in Dorset, England, Iain was the younger son of Lord David Douglas-Hamilton, a decorated Royal Air Force (RAF) officer, and Prunella Stack, a pioneer of women’s fitness. From an early age, he was drawn toward Africa. After studying zoology at Oxford, he followed that pull. At 23, he arrived in Tanzania’s Lake Manyara National Park, where he began the first scientific study of elephant behavior in the wild. It was there that a professional interest became a lifelong responsibility.

Douglas-Hamilton’s connection to elephants was not only intellectual. He spent long hours simply observing them — the quiet moments as important as the dramatic ones. He recalled a particular elephant that would approach his vehicle regularly, until a point that he could walk alongside her, feeding her wild gardenia fruits. “She was very special,” he said. “One day, she brought her babies to meet me.”

But as he traveled across Africa during the 1970s and 1980s, he saw how the ivory trade was emptying landscapes of elephants. He described it as a “holocaust of elephants,” as populations were halved in just a few decades. The scale of the killing filled him with urgency, so he was among the first to call for a total ban on the ivory trade, and when that ban came in 1989, it reflected his persistence. For a period, elephant populations recovered — a glimpse of what was possible with coordinated action.

Iain Douglas-Hamilton. Image courtesy of the Indianapolis Prize.

His work stretched well beyond academia. In 1993, he founded Save the Elephants, a Kenyan-based conservation organization. He helped pioneer the use of GPS tracking to better understand elephant migrations and the dangers they encountered. The maps he produced — colorful paths across northern Kenya — guided rangers and informed governments. They changed how conservation was done.

Douglas-Hamilton earned numerous honors, including the Indianapolis Prize for animal conservation in 2010, and a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2015. Yet he often brushed away questions about recognition, insisting elephants were the real story. He argued that their survival said something about humanity — whether we were willing to protect a creature that asked nothing from us but space.

He was also a gifted communicator. Whether addressing university students or local herders in Samburu, he could explain an elephant’s plight without losing hope. Colleagues say this ability to listen — not just speak — made him effective.

But this work took a toll: he sometimes flew low over poaching hotspots, risking attack, and endured nights of dread when news arrived that another elephant had fallen. Yet, he pressed on, driven by a simple belief that the world would be diminished without elephants.

Late in his life, poaching again surged, driven by demand in Asia. Still, he remained confident the world could change course. He placed faith in younger conservationists, many trained through Save the Elephants, and in policy shifts, such as China’s 2018 domestic ivory ban. To him, the effort to protect elephants would span generations — and he was content knowing the next one had already begun.

In his passing, the world has lost one of its foremost elephant experts. What he built continues in the radio collars that still send signals, and in the teams that follow those signals into the field. They carry forward the mission he never set down.

See related reading:

Lives worth living: Elephants, Iain Douglas-Hamilton and the fight for coexistence

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