NOVEMBER
5, 2015
by
Chuck Bednar
A
mysterious event in which tens of thousands of
endangered antelopes died off en masse,
first observed back in May, was more extensive than previously believed, with
experts now saying that more than half of the saiga population may have been
wiped out.
Initial
estimates had placed the death toll at Betpak-dala in Kazakhstan, the calving
grounds of the largest saiga population, at 120,000, according to the New York Times. But aerial observations conducted later
in the summer revealed fewer survivors than expected, and now scientists
believe that at least 211,000 saigas, or 88 percent of the Betpak-dala
population, are dead.
The Guardian reported Tuesday that at least
150,000 adult saiga were buried over a two week span in May. However,
researchers admit that the actual death toll is likely far higher, as many
bodies were discovered but not added to the total, and that hundreds of
thousands of calves that were also killed were not included in the figures.
Is
this the end of the line for the saiga antelopes?
Prior
to the mass deaths, the estimated global saiga population was estimated to be
between 250,000 and 320,000—90 percent of which lived in the affected area. The
deaths, which have been blamed on a ordinarily harmless bacteria that suddenly
and inexplicably became virulent, has scientists deeply concerned about the
future of the antelope species.
“I’ve
worked in wildlife disease all my life, and I thought I’d seen some pretty grim
things, but this takes the biscuit,” Richard A. Kock from the Royal Veterinary
College in London, told theTimes, noting that he and his colleagues believe the
combination of climate change and stormy spring weather may have been what
transformed the microbe into a deadly pathogen.
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