Here you’ll find the world’s biggest concentration of African elephants
With over 130,000 elephants living within its boundaries, Botswana is home to the world’s largest elephant population, and one of the last strongholds for African elephants as poaching continues to decimate populations. The biggest concentration can be found in Chobe National Park, a majestic 11,000-sq-km wildlife sanctuary in northern Botswana. Botswana has the largest elephant population on the continent due to many reasons, including tight protection and civil unrest in neighboring countries. The relative difficulty in accessing the wildlife areas coupled with the military threat to poachers has allowed the elephant population in Botswana to grow.
Chobe National Park is the third largest conservation area in Botswana - famous for its elephants estimated to be 120,000. The park supports the largest surviving elephant population in the world - The Chobe elephants are migratory, making seasonal movements of up to 200 kilometres in a circuit from the Chobe and Linyanti rivers, where they concentrate in the dry season.