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With 110 dead, elephants in Zimbabwe park desperately hunt for water

CGTN

00:40

Storm clouds are finally gathering over Zimbabwe's biggest animal reserve, but it has come too­ late for more than 110 elephants that have died in a searing, extended drought. 

There is little that rangers at the Hwange National Park can do except cut the tusks off the decaying corpses before poachers find them.

With the black clouds in recent days promising life-saving rains, the rangers may not find all of the victims of the drought on their daily hunts.   

The 14,600-square-kilometre park – bigger than many countries – is home to more than 45,000 savanna elephants.

Blackened corpses scar a landscape where the rains have been more than six weeks late and scorching temperatures have regularly hit 40 degrees Celsius.

Tinashe Farawo, spokesperson for the Zimbabwe national parks authority, Zimparks, said "the old, the young and the sick" have been worst hit.

Some have fallen in dried-up waterholes, some spent their final hours in the shade of a tree. 

Many are infant elephants – but all that is left is the shrivelled skin over the rotting carcass.

Pond shrinks in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP
Pond shrinks in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP

Pond shrinks in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP

The intact tusk is a sign that it was a natural death. But there is a heavy stench around the elephants, that have attracted growing attention in recent years.

On average, an elephant drinks more than 200 liters of water and eats some 140 kilograms of food a day.

More than 200 elephants died in a 2019 drought but the rangers say it could be worse this time once the end of the summer arrives.

Overpopulation of animals

An aerial survey started in 2022 estimated the Hwange's elephant population at 227,900 animals.

The estimated 100,000 elephants in Zimbabwe is twice the capacity of its parks, which increased pressure on Hwange's resources while climate change has emerged as a new risk.

Farawo said 112 elephant deaths had been confirmed since September.

"We have high temperatures and we have no water. They are bound to be stressed and die."

Elephants forage in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP
Elephants forage in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP

Elephants forage in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, December 16, 2023. /AFP

Climate change has increased the number of droughts, he added.

"It's not only elephants which are affected, there are also other animals. Elephants can be easily noticed because of their size."

Farawo said the parks authority was also concerned that the elephants had become "overpopulated" and "are destroying the habitat."

Drought in Hwange

Hwange, covered in dry grass, leafless trees and some desert-like open areas, has 104 solar-powered boreholes across the park to reach further into the water table that falls lower each year.

But it has not been enough, and the drought which has hit several southern African countries, has been worsened this year by the El Nino phenomenon.

An elephant is captured drinking water from swimming pools in private homes in Hwange, Zimbabwe. /AFP
An elephant is captured drinking water from swimming pools in private homes in Hwange, Zimbabwe. /AFP

An elephant is captured drinking water from swimming pools in private homes in Hwange, Zimbabwe. /AFP

The hunt for water has taken elephants dangerously close to human habitations on the fringes of Hwange.

They have drunk in desperation from swimming pools in private homes and risked drinking at water holes contaminated by dead animals.

Dried-up water holes are forcing elephants and other wildlife to walk long distances for food and water.

Some have crossed into Botswana and other neighbouring countries where many deaths have also been reported.

Source(s): AFP
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