San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BOTSWANA: MASS ELEPHANT DIE-OFF CAUSED BY TOXIN IN BACTERIA

- BY MQONDISI DUBE & MAX BEARAK Dube and Bearak write for The Washington Post.

Months after hundreds of elephants were found dead in a concentrat­ed area near Botswana’s famed Okavango swamps, raising fears that they had been intentiona­lly poisoned, the southern African country’s government said test results on samples collected from the carcasses pointed instead to a naturally occurring toxin produced by cyanobacte­ria.

The official death toll stands at 330, with the fatalities taking place between late April and June. Botswana has the world’s largest population of elephants, around 130,000 in total. Their growing numbers have been lauded by conservati­onists and Botswana has become a mecca for tourists seeking to witness and photograph wildlife.

Popular sentiment in parts of the country has turned against elephants, however, as many blame them for destroying cropland. Botswana’s current president, Mokgweetsi Masisi, campaigned and won re-election partly on promises to keep elephants more in check, and his government has reintroduc­ed a small number of elephant hunting licenses that were banned under his predecesso­r.

“There is absolutely no reason to believe that there was human involvemen­t in these mortalitie­s,” Cyril Taolo, the deputy director of Botswana’s wildlife ministry, said at a news conference in the capital Gaborone on Monday.

That assertion was comnow plicated later in the conference by Mmadi Reuben, the ministry’s head veterinary officer, who said that while cyanobacte­ria had been identified as the culprit, the deaths remained mysterious, especially the question of why only elephants died when the toxin was in water available to other animals.

“We have many questions still to be answered such as why the elephants only and why that area only. We have a number of hypotheses we are investigat­ing,” he said.

Conservati­onists working in Botswana have also become bitterly divided over the question of human-elephant conflict. Some allege that the government is using, and even fomenting anti-elephant sentiment as a populist political tool, while others see the government as trying to balance conservati­on and human needs.

Keith Lindsay, an elephant biologist with 40 years of experience, including five in the wildlife ministry under Masisi’s predecesso­r, said he still believed the elephants in the Okavango had been “targeted” and claimed that the tests did not rule out other neurotoxin­s available to farmers. He also called on the government to release the full test results to the public.

The samples were also tested for cyanide, pesticides and anthrax at laboratori­es in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Canada and the United States. Poaching was ruled out early on because the elephants’ valuable tusks were left untouched.

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