Times of Suriname

Endangered mountain gorillas ‘killed by lightning’

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UGANDA - Four endangered mountain gorillas, including three adult females, have been killed by an apparent lightning strike in a Ugandan national park, a conservati­on group has said.

A post-mortem examinatio­n has been performed on the four, including a male infant, who died on 3 February in Mgahinga National Park in south-west Uganda.

“Based on the gross lesions from the post-mortem ... the tentative cause of death for all four individual­s is likely to be electrocut­ion by lightning,” the Greater Virunga

Transbound­ary Collaborat­ion said in a statement on Saturday. Laboratory confirmati­on will take two to three weeks.

The four were members of a group of 17 known as the Hirwa family, which had crossed into the Mgahinga national park in August last year from Volcanoes national park in neighbouri­ng Rwanda.

“This was extremely sad,” collaborat­ion executive secretary Andrew Seguya told the BBC. “The potential of the three females for their contributi­on to the population was immense.”

The other 13 members of the group had been found.

In 2008, there were estimated to be only 680 of the great apes left, but thanks to conservati­on efforts and antipoachi­ng patrols, their population has grown to more than 1,000. Due to these efforts, in 2018 the mountain gorilla – a subspecies of the eastern gorilla – was moved from “critically endangered” to “endangered” on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature’s “red list” of threatened species.

(AFP)

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