Toronto Star

Plastic diet fatal to elephants

- ACHALA PUSSALLA

Conservati­onists and veterinari­ans are warning that plastic waste in an open landfill in eastern Sri Lanka is killing elephants in the region, after two more were found dead over the weekend.

Around 20 elephants have died over the last eight years after consuming plastic trash in the dump in Pallakkadu village in Ampara district, about 210 kilometres east of the capital, Colombo.

Examinatio­ns of the dead animals showed they had swallowed large amounts of nondegrada­ble plastic that is found in the garbage dump, wildlife veterinari­an Nihal Pushpakuma­ra said.

“Polyethyle­ne, food wrappers, plastic, other non-digestible­s and water were the only things we could see in the post mortems. The normal food that elephants eat and digest was not evident,” he said.

Elephants are revered in Sri Lanka but are also endangered. Their numbers have dwindled from about 14,000 in the 19th century to 6,000 in 2011, according to the country’s first elephant census.

They are increasing­ly vulnerable because of the loss and degradatio­n of their natural habitat. Many venture closer to human settlement­s in search of food, and some are killed by poachers or farmers angry over damage to their crops.

Hungry elephants seek out the waste in the landfill, consuming plastic as well as sharp objects that damage their digestive systems, Pushpakuma­ra said.

In 2017, the government announced it will recycle the garbage in dumps near wildlife zones to prevent elephants from consuming plastic waste. It also said electric fences would be erected to keep the animals away. But neither has been fully implemente­d.

There are 54 waste dumps in wildlife zones around the country, with around 300 elephants roaming near them, according to officials.

The waste management site in Pallakkadu village was set up in 2008 with aid from the European Union. Garbage collected from nine nearby villages is being dumped there but is not being recycled.

In 2014, the electric fence protecting the site was struck by lightning and authoritie­s never repaired it.

Villagers often don’t know how to install the electric fences so they are safe and “could endanger their own lives as well as those of the elephants,” said Keerthi Ranasinghe, a local councillor.

“Even though we call them a menace, wild elephants are also a resource. Authoritie­s need to come up with a way to protect both,” he said.

 ?? ACHALA PUSSALLA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Wild elephants scavenge for food at an open landfill in Pallakkadu village in Sri Lanka.
ACHALA PUSSALLA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Wild elephants scavenge for food at an open landfill in Pallakkadu village in Sri Lanka.

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