A Sumatran elephant calf has died days after conservation officials in Indonesia amputated half of her trunk due to severe injuries from a suspected snare trap.
The female calf had been found alone and severely wounded by locals in Aceh Jaya district, in northern Sumatra, and handed over to the provincial conservation department, or BKSDA.
BKSDA head Agus Arianto said the animal had severe wounds to her trunk, which appeared to have been inflicted by a snare trap, essentially a metal wire typically used by poachers to trap bushmeat. Agus said veterinarians decided to amputate half of her trunk as the wounds were believed to be untreatable.
“There was no other choice because the wound had been there for a while. If we had let it be, it would have endangered the elephant calf herself,” he said.
The Sumatran elephant (Elephas maximus sumatranus), a subspecies of the Asian elephant, has seen its population in the wild decline along with the loss of its lowland forest habitats to oil palm plantations. Most elephants in Sumatra today live outside formally protected areas, and are frequently involved in human-elephant conflicts when they stray into farms and villages.
The species is listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List, and is meant to be protected under Indonesia’s 1990 Conservation Act, which prohibits the capture, killing or trade of the animal.
Source: Mongabay
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