Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

‘Nocturnal’ tuskers giving poachers slip

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ELEPHANTS are becoming nocturnal creatures to avoid the poachers hunting them to the brink of extinction, a study has shown.

Researcher­s found that African elephants now move more at night in areas that suffer high levels of ivory poaching. Conservati­onists say the change in behaviour when in a “landscape of fear” may have long-term implicatio­ns for their survival.

The idea that elephants are becoming more nocturnal was observed last year in a bull elephant named Morgan who was being tracked on Kenya’s coast with a GPS collar as he moved towards the war- torn nation of Somalia.

Morgan increased his nocturnal activity as he entered the dangerous region – moving only by night and staying hidden in thick bush all day to avoid detection.

The research was conducted by conservati­on group Save The Elephants and the University of Twente in Holland, together with the Kenya Wildlife Service.

Save The Elephants founder Iain Douglas-Hamilton said: “This alteration in movement behaviour has implicatio­ns for their foraging strategy, reproducti­on and survival, which are not yet fully understood.”

Meanwhile, antelope are at risk of extinction as they are hunted for meat, a shocking report warned yesterday.

The annual Red List of Threatened Species said five species of African antelope – the giant eland, mountain reedbuck, Heuglin’s gazelle, southern leche and grey rhebok – face being wiped out.

The report also said billions of ash trees could be wiped out by the emerald borer beetle, which arrived in the US from Asia in the 1990s. – Daily Mail

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