More than 100 wild animals, including at least eight rare rhinos, have died in recent flooding at a national park in north-eastern India, officials say. The Kaziranga park in Assam state is home to the world’s largest population of one-horned rhinos, which faced extinction at the turn of the century. But this year’s monsoon rains have almost 85% of the park under water. The floods have killed at least 190 people and displaced millions in Assam as well as in Nepal. Kaziranga park, which is a Unesco World Heritage site, is home to at least 2,400 one-horned rhinos.
Park officials told the Hindustan Times eight one-horned rhinos had drowned in the recent rains, while another died of natural causes last month. Dozens of other animals, including deer, buffalo and porcupines, have also been died – many due to drowning, although others were hit by vehicles as they attempted to escape the floodwaters. Across Assam, heavy rain has submerged thousands of villages. Hundreds of relief camps have been set up to shelter those displaced. (BBC)…[+]