December
28, 2018
The
latest killer tsunami in Indonesia has put pressure on conservationists to ramp
up a longstanding plan to find a suitable secondary habitat for the Javan rhino
Indonesia's
tsunami has raised fears that another deadly wave could wipe out the few dozen
Javan rhinos still living in the wild, conservation authorities said Friday.
There are
believed to be fewer than 70 of the critically endangered species in
a national park not
far from a rumbling volcano that triggered Saturday's killer wave.
None of
the animals are believed to have been killed in the disaster—which left more
than 400 people dead—but officials are warning that another deadly wave could
slam into the stricken region.
That is
putting pressure on conservationists at Ujung Kulon National Park, on the
western tip of Indonesia's main island of Java, to ramp up a longstanding plan
to find a suitable secondary habitat for the rhinos.
"It's
become our duty to work harder to find a second habitat because the danger is
real," national park chief Mamat Rahmat told AFP.
"We're
lucky that the tsunami did not affect the Javan rhinos this time. But the
threat is there and we need to act accordingly."
Widodo
Ramono, head of the Rhino Conservation Foundation of Indonesia, added: "If
you've only got one habitat and there's another tsunami, the rhinos could be
wiped out completely."
Plans to
find a second home for the species have been in the works for about eight
years, with conservationists surveying areas all over Java and neighbouring
Sumatra but so far without success, he said.
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