China's migrating elephants move southeast
KUNMING -- The herd of 14 wild Asian elephants roaming southwest China's Yunnan province has moved 10.5 km in the southeastern direction, authorities said.
The elephants entered Longwu town in Honghe Hani and Yi autonomous prefecture at 8:20 pm Friday and are safe, according to the headquarters in charge of monitoring their migration.
The male elephant that broke away from the herd was captured and sent back to its forest home in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture on Wednesday. It is in a good condition.
On Saturday, authorities dispatched 346 emergency and police staff, deployed dozens of vehicles and 23 drones and evacuated 2,259 local residents. The authorities also fed two tons of food to the elephants.
The herd of 15 wandering wild Asian elephants traveled about 500 km north from its forest home in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, before reaching the provincial capital Kunming on June 2.
The male elephant strayed from the herd on June 6, and moved around in the cities of Kunming, Anning and Yuxi, with an activity area of 140 square km and traversing a distance of 190 km. The animals were mainly fed by locals or foraged in villages.
- 7 people, 2 companies charged over deadly Hong Kong residential building fire
- Chinese researchers treat rare disease via new RNA editing technology
- Chinese scientists identify new midge species in SW China's Xizang
- China releases 150b aquatic juveniles during 2021-2025 to boost biodiversity
- China's anti-graft chief emphasizes high-quality development of anti-graft work
- China remains world's top contributor to high-quality research: Nature Index































