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Accident highlights need to protect pachyderm population


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Accident highlights need to protect pachyderm population

By THE NATION

 

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AS THE search continued yesterday for an elephant that was injured on Thursday after being hit by a pickup truck in Khao Ang Rue Nai wildlife sanctuary in Chachoengsao province, sanctuary chief Decha Nilwichien revealed nearly 14,000 wild animals die per year on the road that cuts through the sanctuary.

 

Deputy Prime Minister General Prawit Wongsuwan had proposed in 2015 to permanently close the 20-kilometre section of the road that cuts through the sanctuary, even though the new route around the forest would add 40km to people’s journeys, Decha said.

 

When the ongoing construction detour is complete, the problematic section would be closed and thus would reduce losses of wildlife and people, Decha said. The detour would allow motorists from Chacherngsao’s Tha Takiab district to Sa Kaew’s Khao Chakan area to no longer have to use highways 3259 and 3076 and the wild elephants would be left in peace.

 

A source at the Department of National Park, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP) has revealed that the wild elephant population in the 130,000-rai forest covering five eastern provinces, was 422 as of last April. That figure is rising by 8.2 per cent a year and it is expected that the elephants will spill out of the forest’s eastern side in the next 10 years due to rising population, the shrinking sources of food in forest and the temptation of farmland crops. 

 

The 67,400-rai (10,784-hectare) Khao Ang Rue Nai wildlife sanctuary alone now has 275 elephants after two elephants earlier died.

 

The source said the DNP has been working on measures to keep the elephants in the |forest by creating more food and water for them.

 

As for the search for the pachyderm that sustained two hind-leg injuries after the Thursday crash, Decha said his team had traced its impaired footprints to a two-km spot from the road before the trail went cold. 

 

A team of three veterinarians and one animal science expert was on stand-by at the sanctuary office to treat the elephant once it is found, he added.

 

Veterinarian Pattarapol Manee-on from the DNP suggested the elephant might have been in an adrenaline rush after the crash and fled into the jungle despite its leg injuries.

 

Three or four days later, however, its legs would become swollen and inflamed and it would probably even sustain broken bones, he said.

 

Pickup driver Jamras Phromchan, 46, said he and a friend, Bancha Saesiang, 65, were heading home in Sa Kaew when they encountered a group of three elephants and hit one of them. 

 

The truck careered into the side of the road while the elephants fled.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30339552

 

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-02-24
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13 hours ago, MaxYakov said:

At 14,000 road kills per year it's not a wildlife sanctuary. It's a wildlife kill zone.

In an earlier post  "The pickup driver said he could not apply his brakes in time after the elephant suddenly popped out of the forest"

 

Several lines of thought suggest that this is nonsense.

 

What velocity (speed x mass)  is required for a pickup to break BOTH back legs of an elephant.  I suggest that this is extremely high.

 

Elephants do not "pop out of the forest" . They lumber out slowly.  They also walk forwards (rather than sideways or backwards).  For its hind legs to be on the road it must have been visible for a relatively long period of time on this straight raod.

 

I would conclude that the pick-up driver was driving as fast as he could  (totally ignoring any speed limit), and did not slow down when he saw the elephant, but continued in the hope that the elephant would jump out of his way !

 

 

 

 

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