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Sri Lanka battles to stop elephants eating plastic trash
by Staff Writers
Colombo (AFP) Nov 30, 2020

Sri Lanka's government said Monday that it was building trenches and erecting electric fences to stop elephants eating plastic trash at open garbage dumps.

Plastic in Sri Lankan landfills is a major killer of elephants, with autopsies showing large quantities of it in the stomachs of animals who died in agony after rummaging at dumps.

The Department of Wildlife Conservation said the number of open tips had been cut to 15 from 54 since 2017, but that the problem persisted at nine sites.

"Initial work has already begun at two dumps in the Ampara district and we hope to complete the work by early next year," the department said.

A source told AFP that the slanting trenches would be six feet (1.8 metres) deep.

Sri Lanka's elephant population has declined to about 7,000 according to the latest census, down from 12,000 in the early 1900s.

Most are shot dead or poisoned by farmers trying to keep them off their land, but large numbers also die from consuming plastic rubbish.

Authorities announced legislation to ban the import of most plastic products in August. A separate ban on single-use plastics comes into effect from January.

Sri Lanka has since 2017 outlawed the manufacture or import of non-biodegradable plastic used for wrapping food and shopping bags.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has given wildlife officials until mid-2022 to implement a plan to reduce human-elephant conflict that has claimed the lives of more than 600 elephants and nearly 200 people in the past two years.


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FLORA AND FAUNA
German Entomological Institute names Danish mayfly Insect of the Year
Washington DC (UPI) Nov 27, 2020
The Danish mayfly has been named 2021's Insect of the Year. A board of trustees established by the German Entomological Institute has named an Insect of the Year every year since 1999, with the aim of honoring an insect species that deserves greater fame for its rarity, its ecological value, aesthetic value - or even its "ordinariness." "The Insect of the Year is intended to bring an exemplary species (and insects in general) closer to people," said an announcement from the institute. / ... read more

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