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  • 29
    Jan
    2013
    7:19am, EST

    Poison suspected in deaths of 10 endangered pygmy elephants in Borneo

    Sabah Wildlife Department via AFP - Getty Images

    A baby pygmy elephant stands beside a dead adult in the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve in Malaysia's Sabah state.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Ten endangered pygmy elephants have been found dead in suspicious circumstances in Malaysia, according to reports.

    Sen Nathan, head veterinarian at the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve in Sabah state on the island of Borneo, said officials "highly suspect" the animals were poisoned, but tests are still to be carried out to determine whether they were deliberately harmed, BBC News reported.


    "It was actually a very sad sight to see all those dead elephants, especially one of the dead females who had a very young calf of about three months old. The calf was trying to wake the dead mother up," he said, according to the BBC.

    Nathan added the elephants, aged between four and 20, were believed to be from the same family group.

    Malaysia’s The Star newspaper said the first elephant died on Dec. 29 and the last was found on Jan. 24.

    The paper reported that the dead animals were found in an area that it described as an “industrial tree plantation.”

    The Star said it was not known how the elephants had died, and noted it was possible they had eaten poisonous plants or pesticides.

    The BBC cited Masidi Manjun, environmental minister for the Sabah area, as saying it was “a sad day for conservation and Sabah.”

    Sabah Wildlife Department via Reuters

    Malaysia's wildlife officials inspect a dead pygmy elephant.

    Conservation charity WWF runs an “adopt a pygmy elephant” campaign.

    According to its website, the animals are found “only on the northeast tip of the island of Borneo, and inhabit forests near water sources and grasslands. “

    “Borneo pygmy elephants are smaller than other Asian elephants, chubbier, and have bigger ears and tails,” it said. “They eat roughly 300 pounds of food daily—mostly roots, grasses, leaves, bananas and sugar cane.”

    WWF estimates that there are possibly as low as 1,600 individuals in the wild.

    “The top threats to pygmy elephants are habitat loss and conflict with humans,” it added.

    Related:

    Orphaned elephants find sanctuary in Kenya amid rampant poaching

    183 comments

    We are going to completely wreck this planet. I am afraid however that no serious action, even remedial, will occur until the tipping point is long past. At that point we will witness the die off of our species.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: malaysia, endangered, borneo, poison, featured, sabah, pygmy-elephants
  • 7
    Dec
    2011
    8:43pm, EST

    Elephant kills Australian woman trekker

    By msnbc.com staff

    An Australian woman trekking in a wildlife park in the Malaysian part of Borneo island was attacked and killed by a pygmy elephant on Wednesday, the website news.com.au reported Thursday.

    Jenna O’Grady Donley, a 25-year-old veterinarian from Sydney, was accompanied by a local guide and a friend in Tabin Wildlife Reserve when the group was attacked, according to the report.

    The elephant’s tusk impaled Donley and she died instantly, according to Malaysia’s wildlife department director Laurentius Ambu, who was quoted by the French news agency AFP. The guide and the other woman escaped.

    Donley’s mother told the Australian Broadcasting Company that her daughter was a gifted veterinarian who had recently completed her thesis on renal failure in big cats, the website said.

    Reports on the goring speculated that the bull elephant became aggressive when it was startled, but noted that fatal attacks are very rare.

    Pygmy elephants are indigenous to Borneo, and grow to about two-thirds the height of Asian elephants.  

    25 comments

    I'm sorry that we and the animals lost someone who seemed to care about them, and I am sorry for her family's loss. Unfortunately that is a big risk when dealing with wild animals and if they were indeed off the main trail with cameras it isn't surprising the bull would be startled and attack.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: malaysia, australia, elephant, borneo

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