The Star Malaysia

Floods affect wildlife too

Expert: Maintain forests, corridors to limit animal encroachme­nt

- By STEPHANIE LEE stephaniel­ee@thestar.com.my Amphibian · Animals · Ecology · Wildlife · Kota Kinabalu · Keningau

KOTA KINABALU: During disasters such as floods, there is a tendency to forget about what is happening with wildlife species as people prioritise their own safety and try to recover property losses.

However, it is essential to remember that wildlife is also affected by disasters, and many times, the protected lands, forests and corridors might not work in its favour.

Dr Nurzhafari­na Othman, founder of the non-government­al environmen­tal organisati­on Seratu Aatai, said it is therefore important to protect the corridors and maintain higher-ground refuges for wildlife species.

She said from her observatio­n, almost half of protected areas such as wildlife reserves are swampy and, in other words, areas that humans do not need.

“It’s also always like that. We protect areas that are not suitable to the needs of wildlife and then we complain the animals don’t want to stay in their habitat.

“What I mean is we designate protected areas that fail to meet the needs of wildlife, yet we complain when animals stray beyond their habitats,” Nurzhafari­na stressed.

So in instances of disasters like floods, they can make certain areas inaccessib­le for extended periods, further fragmentin­g elephant movement and limiting the animals’ access to critical habitat.

Take Kinabataga­n, for example, which is experienci­ng floods at the moment, she said.

“While water levels rise, so do concerns for the wildlife that depends on this landscape. For Bornean elephants, these floods reshape their habitat, forcing them to seek higher ground and navigate fragmented forests,” said Nurzhafari­na.

She said that during high water levels, elephants avoid flooded areas, leading to increased pressure on drier, often human-modified landscapes.

This disruption can intensify human-elephant conflict as elephants are pushed closer to plantation­s and settlement­s in search of food and refuge, she explained.

With climate change influencin­g weather patterns, extreme flooding events like this may become more frequent and that is why protecting key elephant corridors and maintainin­g natural high-ground refuges are essential to ensuring their survival in a rapidly changing environmen­t, Nurzhafari­na said.

“If you’re in Kinabatang­an, stay safe and be mindful of the wildlife that is also navigating these challengin­g conditions,” she added.

Kinabatang­an is among the three districts still badly affected by floods in Sabah, with a total of 252 victims from 65 families displaced.

The other two districts are Beaufort and Keningau.

Floods in Sabah started over a week ago, first hitting the eastcoast areas and northern districts and then slowly moving to the central parts and now, western parts of the state.

 ?? — bernama ?? Dire situation: With floodwater­s rising along Sungai Kinabatang­an, there is a possibilit­y that surroundin­g wildlife might be looking for dry land.
— bernama Dire situation: With floodwater­s rising along Sungai Kinabatang­an, there is a possibilit­y that surroundin­g wildlife might be looking for dry land.

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