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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Jacob Phillips

100 elephants die in Zimbabwe due to drought

At least 100 elephants have died in Zimbabwe's largest national park due to drought.

Wildlife authorities and conservation groups have warned the deaths are a grisly sign of the impact of climate change and the El Nino weather phenomenon.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare has described the situation as a crisis for elephants and other animals.

Authorities fear a repeat of 2019, when more than 200 elephants at the Hwange National Park died in a severe drought.

Forecasts suggest a scarcity of rain and rising heat in parts of Zimbabwe including at the Hwange, which is home to around 45,000 elephants along with more than 100 other mammal species and 400 bird species.

An elephant lies dead metres from a watering hole in Hwange National Park (Privilege Musvanhiri/IFAW via AP)

Tinashe Farawo, spokesman for the Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority, posted a video on social media site X, formerly Twitter, showing a young elephant struggling for its life after becoming stuck in mud in a water hole that had partly dried up in Hwange.

He said: "The most affected elephants are the young, elderly and sick that can't travel long distances to find water."

Park rangers have had to remove dead elephants’ tusks when they can for safekeeping so the carcasses don't attract poachers.

Mr Farawo added that an average-sized elephant needs a daily water intake of about 200 liters (52 gallons).

"El Nino is making an already dire situation worse," he continued.

El Nino is a natural and recurring weather phenomenon that warms parts of the Pacific, affecting weather patterns around the world. 

Studies indicate that climate change may be making El Ninos stronger, leading to more extreme consequences.

While this year's El Nino brought deadly floods to East Africa recently, it is expected to cause below-average rainfall across southern Africa.

That has already been felt in Zimbabwe, where the rainy season began weeks later than usual. While some rain has now fallen, the forecasts are generally for a dry, hot summer ahead.

"This phenomenon is recurring," said Phillip Kuvawoga, a landscape program director at the International Fund for Animal Welfare, which raised the alarm for Hwange's elephants in a report this month.

Zimbabwe's rainy season once started reliably in October and ran through to March. It has become erratic in recent years and conservationists have noticed longer, more severe dry spells.

"Our region will have significantly less rainfall, so the dry spell could return soon because of El Nino," said Trevor Lane, director of The Bhejane Trust, a conservation group which assists Zimbabwe's parks agency.

"They perform a far bigger role than humans in reforestation," Mr Lane said. "That is one of the reasons we fight to keep elephants alive."

He said his organisation has been pumping 1.5 million liters of water into Hwange's waterholes daily from over 50 boreholes it manages in partnership with the parks agency.

The 14,500-square-kilometer (5,600-square-mile) park, which doesn't have a major river flowing through it, has just over 100 solar-powered boreholes that pump water for the animals.

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