Bangkok Post

Elephants, local wildlife dying en masse amid severe drought

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MANA POOLS: Weak from hunger and thirst, the elephant struggled to reach a pool of water in this African wildlife reserve. But the majestic mammal got stuck in the mud surroundin­g the sun-baked watering hole, which had dramatical­ly shrunk due to a severe drought.

Eventually park staff freed the trapped elephant, but it collapsed and died. Just metres away lay the carcass of a Cape buffalo that had also been pulled from the mud, but was attacked by hungry lions.

Elephants, zebras, hippos, impalas, buffaloes and many other wildlife are stressed by lack of food and water in Zimbabwe’s Mana Pools National Park, whose very name comes from the four pools of water normally filled by the flooding Zambezi River each rainy season, and where wildlife traditiona­lly drink. The word mana means four in the Shona language.

At least 105 elephants have died in Zimbabwe’s wildlife reserves, most of them in Mana and the larger Hwange National Park in the past two months, according to the Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority. Many desperate animals are straying from Zimbabwe’s parks into nearby communitie­s in search of food and water.

Mana Pools, a Unesco World Heritage Site for its splendid setting along the Zambezi River, annually experience­s hot, dry weather at this time of year. But this year it’s far worse as a result of poor rains last year. Even the river’s flow has reduced.

The drought parching southern Africa is also affecting people. An estimated 11 million people are threatened with hunger in nine countries in the region, according to the World Food Program, which is planning largescale food distributi­on. The countries of southern Africa have experience­d normal rainfall in only one of the past five growing seasons, it said.

Seasonal rains are expected soon, but parks officials and wildlife lovers, fearing that too many animals will die before then, are bringing in food to help the distressed animals. The extremely harsh conditions persuaded park authoritie­s to abandon their usual policy of not intervenin­g.

Each morning, Munyaradzi Dzoro, a parks agency wildlife officer, prays for rain. “It’s beginning to be serious,’’ he said, standing next to the remains of the elephant and buffalo. “It might be worse if we fail to receive rains” by early November.

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