Showing posts with label poison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poison. Show all posts

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Pesticide poisoning killed elephants

Pesticide poisoning likely killed 14 elephants in Sabah last month.

THE 14 pygmy elephants which died mysteriously at the Gunung Rara reserves last month are likely to have died from pesticide poisoning, according to research carried out by the Borneo Conservation Trust (BCT).

BCT found chemicals such as cyanide and sulphur at the site where the elephants were found, but is unsure whether the poisoning was deliberate.

BCT conservation and research head Raymond Alfred said traces of both chemicals could have contaminated the animals' food sources near the area.

"Cyanide could be traced to certain pesticides that are used to increase the growth of young oil palm trees, while sulphur is normally used by local hunters or Indonesian workers hunting wild boars at the edge of plantations adjacent to the forest," he said.

"However, no concrete evidence has been gathered to show that the elephants were poisoned by the plantation during their encroachment or presence along the Ulu Sungai Napagon and Imbok River at the area where the elephants were discovered," he said.

"And there is also no concrete evidence showing that the logging contractors were using high amount of pesticides to kill the elephants at the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve, although white substances were found within the vicinity where the elephant corpses were found," he stressed.

Alfred added that elephants were very alert creatures and could smell poison.

He explained that elephants entered the plantations within the Gunung Rara and Kalabakan reserves to gain access to water and a saltlick.

Non-functioning electrical fences set up by the plantations involved have also allowed the elephants easy access into the plantations, he pointed out.

Alfred suggested several possible solutions to address the issue, including restoring and expanding the riverine forest, as well as preserving as many virgin and lowland secondary forests as possible.

He said the major threats Bornean elephants face are the degradation and fragmentation of their habitat.

This raises the risk of genetic isolation from other elephants, particularly when traditional seasonal migratory routes are blocked.

The fragmentation of elephant habitat has also led to the increasing number of human-elephant conflicts at Lower Kinabatangan, Alfred said.

To counter the issues faced by the elephants, Raymond stressed the need to establish forest corridors and strengthen existing ones.

"The corridors don't necessarily have to be established at prime elephant habitats. It could be established at degraded forest areas to facilitate elephant movement and to provide the elephants with some cover," he said.

"In forest reserves, priority is given to the elephants' requirements, but compatible human activities, such as sustained-yield forestry and slow rotation of timber harvesting programme, can also contribute to creating a good habitat for elephants as re-growth and secondary vegetation often provide excellent food resources and are capable of maintaining higher elephant densities than primary forests."

Alfred said that BCT and the Sabah Wildlife Department are currently preparing a programme where every plantation had to to establish a wildlife conservation unit.

It will run five to 10 years will help manage multiple-use forest landscapes and monitor the elephant population.The Star/ANN

Source: Brunei Times

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Sabah police identify logging companies at site of pygmy elephants' death

Pygmy elephant
KOTA KINABALU, Feb 6 (Bernama) -- Sabah police have identified the logging companies carrying out works at the site where 14 Borneo Pygmy elephants died mysteriously at the Rara Forest Reserve, about 139km from Tawau, recently. 

Sabah police commissioner Datuk Hamza Taib said, investigations have revealed that there were logging companies with 300 workers present at the said location. 

"The Criminal Investigation Department is in the process of completing the investigation. We know that the place is remote but we also know which companies are working there," he said during a press conference at the Sabah headquarters, here today. 

On Feb 1, police started investigating the case under Section 429 of the Penal Code for mischief towards animals, which is punishable by up to five years in jail. 

He added that they did not discount the possibility that the elephants were poisoned as the dead animals were found with their stomachs ruptured. 

"We have to wait for the chemist report to establish if it was poisoning and only then continue our investigation," he said. 

He believed that the case would be solved after the chemist report and the RM50,000 reward for information leading to its resolution. 

Yesterday, Sabah Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun said an additional RM40,000 would be offered for information leading up to the arrest of the parties responsible for the endangered species death. 

Earlier, the Malaysian Association of Tour and Travel Agents (MATTA) had put up a RM10,000 reward for the same purpose.

Source: mysinchew.com

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Sabah offers RM40,000 reward

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Wildlife and Natural Parks Department officer Augustine David with the sole survivor of a herd of Borneo pygmy elephants found dead in the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve recently. Pic by Lano Lan

KOTA KINABALU: IF the chemist's report indicates that the 14 Borneo  pygmy elephants were poisoned, the state government will offer a RM40,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the culprits.

State Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun said yesterday the chemist's report would be ready on Friday.

At a task force meeting on Monday, he was told that two senior police officers from Kinabatangan had been assigned to investigate the matter.

"The Malaysian Association of Tour & Travel Agents (Matta) has offered RM10,000 and they (task force) have asked the ministry to top it up.

"I found that there is a provision for this in the Wildlife Enactment and I agreed to top it up with another RM40,000. So the potential reward is RM50,000."

All eyes have been on Sabah since news of the death of 14 elephants near the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve, 130km from Tawau, was published.

The Sabah Wildlife and Natural Parks Department believes that the endangered mammals were poisoned. It submitted samples to the Chemistry Department last week.

"Once the chemist's report is ready and if it shows conclusively that someone poisoned the elephants, we will start sending flyers to let people know about the reward.

"We are not saying that the elephants were poisoned. We are saying if the chemist's report confirms it, we will start looking for the culprits."

Friday, February 1, 2013

Yayasan Sabah pledges cooperation in probe of dead elephants

Pygmy elephants' death to be investigated

 

KOTA KINABALU: Yayasan Sabah Group will cooperate with the relevant departments in investigating the cause of death of the elephants at its concession area, said Yayasan Sabah director Tan Sri Datu Khalil Datu Jamalul.

 

He said the Group would work closely with the relevant agencies to find the root cause of the dead elephants and to come up with corrective actions to avoid similar incidents in future.

“In fact, we are part of the Task Force comprising various government departments and agencies set up to investigate the incidents,” he said in a statement, here today.

Yesterday, State Minister of Tourism, Culture and Environment Datuk Masidi Manjun was quoted as confirming that so far, 14 Borneo pygmy elephants had been found dead at the Rara Forest Reserve, about 139km from Tawau.

Masidi had said based on an initial examination of the elephant carcasses, the cause of death was likely to be poisoning.

Khalil also clarified that Syarikat Empayar Kejora Sdn Bhd was not a subsidiary logging company of the Group as purportedly reported in the dailies but a contractor contracted by the Group to undertake responsible logging activities within the area.

All logging contractors under the purview of the Group are stringently bound to the relevant Acts and Enactments including the Forest Enactment (1968), Wildlife Conservation Enactment (1997), Sabah Biodiversity Enactment (2000) and the Environmental Protection Enactment (2002), he said.

 “We are also working closely with many government agencies and national as well as international bodies and NGOs such as the Royal Society of United Kingdom; WWF Malaysia, Face the Future, the Netherlands; IKEA, Sweden; Wetlands International, Forest Research Institute Malaysia, Forest Research Centre Sepilok, Academy Sciences Malaysia, Universiti Malaysia Sabah, PETRONAS, Kyoto University and many others for our forest management, environment, conservation and rehabilitation, environmental education and community outreach programmes,” he added.

Khalil said the group would continue to play a critical role in ensuring that the environment remains available for future generations.  

On this note, he said the Group would not rest on its laurels on issues concerning environmental sustainability.

"Therefore, the Group will work together with other agencies to prevent unwanted incidence like these from happening again especially in our own concession area,” he said. 

Pygmy’s killer must be brought to justice

Pygmy elephants

KUALA LUMPUR: The Malaysia crime Prevention Foundation (MCPF) has expressed full support to the statement by Sabah’s Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun that if the Bornean elephants were maliciously poisoned then the culprits must be brought to justice and be made to pay for their crime against these animals.

“The shocking discovery of the mysterious deaths of 13 Borneo pygmy elephants in Gunung Rara Forest Reserve is indeed the saddest day for Sabah’s conservation efforts,” MCPF Vice Chairman, Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye said in a statement yesterday.

“As an animal lover I am also deeply saddened by the death of these majestic and endangered Bornean elephants,” he said. “The picture of an orphaned elephant calf trying to wake up its dead mother was indeed a heart wrenching sight and would move animal lovers to tears,” he added.

Lee welcomed the setting up of a taskforce by the Sabah Wildlife Department involving the WWF and the police to investigate and get to the bottom of this tragic incident.

He said the authorities concerned must send a strong message to those responsible for the death of the endangered species that their action must not be tolerated and they must be brought to justice.

“Granted that these elephants might roam into plantations and villages where they might cause losses to the owners, such a problem, if it does exist, can be dealt with by the Wildlife Department.

“But if there are humans who go to such extent to kill the 13 endangered pigmy elephants by resorting to poisoning, it is totally unacceptable and justice must be done,” he said.

“According to media reports it would appear that the likely cause of death pointed to poisoning as according to the post mortem the gastro intestinal tracts had severe hemorrhages and ulceration with some bleeding from the mouth and anus,” Lee said.

“If any form of poison is used to kill the elephants leading to their slow and painful deaths, then it is an act of sheer cruelty to the animals which must be taken seriously and those responsible must be brought to book,” he said.

Source: New Sabah Times

Masidi: Death of 10 elephants saddest day for conservation efforts in Sabah

Baby pygmy elephant mourns over dead mother

KOTA KINABALU: The discovery of the deaths of 10 Borneo pygmy elephants in Gunung Rara Forest Reserve was the saddest day for Sabah’s conservation efforts.

“This is a very sad day for conservation and Sabah. The death of these majestic and severely endangered Bornean elephants is a great loss to the state,” Tourism, Culture and Environment Minister Datuk Masidi Manjun  said.

“Though it might be too early to pinpoint a conclusive cause of death, poisoning seems to be the likely cause,” he said.

Masidi said he had directed Sabah Wildlife Department to set up a joint task force with relevant stakeholders such as the Forestry Department, Yayasan Sabah, WWF and police to further investigate these deaths and to get to the bottom of it.

“If indeed these poor elephants were maliciously poisoned I will make sure that the culprits are brought to justice and pay for their crime ” Masidi added.

Elephants are known to roam into plantations and villages where they cause severe losses to the owners.

Sabah Wildlife Department is usually called in to help in steering the elephants away from such places and in some cases they are moved to other forest reserves.

However, some people affected have resorted to poisoning the elephants to stop their menace and among the methods used are pesticides including rat poisons over the years.

State Wildlife director Datuk Dr Laurentius Ambu  said that they were scouring the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve area as well as places adjacent to it to see if any pesticides were used to kill the elephants.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

3 more rare Borneo elephants mysteriously found dead

Wildlife officials investigate the death of an elephant at the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve in Sabah, Malaysia. Thirteen endangered Borneo pygmy elephants have been found dead in the Malaysian forest under mysterious circumstances.
Wildlife officials investigate the death of an elephant at the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve in Sabah, Malaysia. Thirteen endangered Borneo pygmy elephants have been found dead in the Malaysian forest under mysterious circumstances. (Sabah Wildlife Department/Associated Press)

 

13 deaths this month, suspiscions of poisoning

 

Malaysian authorities discovered the decomposing remains of another three endangered Borneo pygmy elephants today, deepening a mystery surrounding at least 13 such deaths this month.

The wildlife department in Malaysia's Sabah state is bracing for the possibility of finding more dead elephants in the Gunung Rara Forest Reserve, where an unknown number of the animals roam, said Masidi Manjun, Sabah's environment minister.

Police are investigating suspicions that the elephants were poisoned. Officials have declined to say whether there are any suspects.

The first 10 known deaths captured wide attention when they were made public this week. Authorities released several photographs of the elephant carcasses and a particularly poignant one of a three-month-old surviving calf that appeared to be trying to wake its dead mother.

"There is definitely a sense of urgency," Masidi said by telephone from Sabah on Wednesday. "We cannot discount the possibility of more bad news."

The orphaned male elephant, nicknamed "Joe" by his rescuers, was transported to a Sabah wildlife park. Officials say he is under observation and appears healthy.

Fewer than 1,500 Borneo pygmy elephants

 

The WWF conservation group estimates that fewer than 1,500 Borneo pygmy elephants exist. Most live in Sabah, one of two Malaysian states on Borneo island, and grow to about 2.5 metres tall, about 30 to 60 centimetres shorter than mainland Asian elephants.

Known for their babyish faces, large ears and long tails, Borneo pygmy elephants were found to be a distinct subspecies only in 2003, after DNA testing.

Officials are working to have a laboratory analysis of samples from the dead elephants ready "as soon as possible," Masidi said.

Department veterinarians have said the elephants, believed to belong to a single herd, suffered severe hemorrhages and ulcers in their gastrointestinal tracts.

Source: CBC News