Indian floods kill 10 endangered Asiatic lions in Gujarat
Version 0 of 1. There are only 523 Asiatic lions left in the wild. Following intense flooding in India following the country's monsoon last month, that number has dropped further after 10 lions were drowned. 81 people are also confirmed to have died due to the flooding in the state of Gujarat in western Indian. Forest officials said the flooding not only killed ten of the 523 wild Asiatic lions left in the world, but also prey animal such as 80 spotted deer and 1,670 Asian antelope. The report was submitted to the state and federal environment ministries over the weekend. Warning: Viewers may find the following video distressing The lions were killed near to the lion sanctuary in Gir National Forest in the southern area of the Indian state. The report also said that other lions were found in "weak health and shocked condition." They were treated and managed to recover from the devastating weather. Conservationists have long argued that the lions should not be kept in a single location, and this latest disaster will solidify their efforts. While they argued successfully in front of the Supreme Court in 2013 for some of the lions to be relocated to another sanctuary, Gujarat officials have resisted the move. C.N. Pandey, a top forest official in Gujarat, said that on June 26 over 10 inches of water fell near the sanctuary and turned a 40-square-mile area "into an unbroken sheet of water." |