Pregnant elephant ‘poisoned’ in Indonesian palm plantation | Inquirer News

Pregnant elephant ‘poisoned’ in Indonesian palm plantation

/ 02:45 PM December 27, 2017

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A pregnant elephant has been found dead in a palm oil plantation on Indonesia’s Sumatra island, in what authorities suspect was a deliberate poisoning, an official said Wednesday.

The animal’s body was found near the remote Seuneubok Bayu village in Aceh on December 22, after authorities received a tip off from locals, Aceh conservation center head Sapto Aji Prabowo told AFP.

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“The 25-year-old elephant had been dead for around 10 days when we got there,” he said.

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“From the autopsy, we saw that its digestive organs turned black which the doctor said was a general indication of poisoning.”

The Sumatran elephant was carrying 13-month old male fetus and was at least six months short of giving birth.

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Locals have told authorities that several days before the carcass was discovered farmers had complained an elephant ate their fertilizer.

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Sumatran elephant are critically endangered and a protected species, but rampant deforestation for plantations has reduced their natural habitat and brought them into conflict with humans.

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At least 11 wild elephants died in Aceh this year, most of them killed by humans, according to Prabowo.

In January, authorities found a dead elephant without tusks in Aceh, along with its abandoned 11-month-old calf.

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TAGS: Elephant, environment, Indonesia

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