PHNOM PENH, Oct 8 (NNN-AKP) – A 30-year-old endangered Asian elephant, weighing three tonnes, has been found dead in a bomb crater, in north-east Cambodia’s Mondulkiri province, the Ministry of Environment said, in a news release, yesterday.
Local residents spotted the elephant’s body in a war-left bomb pit, at the Keo Seima Wildlife Sanctuary in Keo Seima district, on Saturday, and reported it to the rangers.
Din Bunthoeun, acting director of the Mondulkiri Provincial Department of Environment, said, the male elephant was thought to have wandered away from its herd and became trapped in the deep crater, within one or two days before it died.
“According to examination, the dead elephant bore wounds on its front legs, and it was among a herd of 10 to 20 elephants, that were sighted in the area in Apr,” he said.
Khvay Atiya, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Environment, expressed deep sorrow over the death of the wild elephant.
“This is a significant loss for our natural resources,” he said.
Atiya called on stakeholders, particularly local residents, to increase their participation in protecting and preserving the elephants.
In Jan, a seven-month-old endangered Asian elephant was also found dead in Mondulkiri province, with a sharp force injury in its lower part of the chest.
Listed as endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List, Asian elephants are some of the largest mammals on the planet.
According to the Ministry of Environment, it is estimated that there are currently 400-600 Asian elephants in Cambodia’s natural forests, mainly in the Cardamom Mountains and eastern plains of Mondulkiri, Ratanakiri and Stung Treng provinces.– NNN-AKP