Indian officials say recent floods killed 10 endangered lions

 

Indian officials say recent floods killed 10 endangered lions
Photograph released by The Indian Ministry of Defence on June 25, 2015, shows Indian villagers standing on a building awaiting rescue by authorities as floodwaters rise in Amreli District, some 200kms south-west of Ahmedabad in the western state of Gujarat on June 24, 2015.

New Delhi - The report, submitted this weekend to the state's environment ministry, says other lions were found in "weak health and shocked condition" and were given treatment and food supplements.

By AP

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Published: Sun 12 Jul 2015, 10:59 AM

Last updated: Sun 12 Jul 2015, 1:03 PM

Officials say monsoon flooding that killed dozens of people in western India last month also hurt the world's last population of wild Asiatic lions.
The floods killed at least 81 people with mudslides, collapsed homes or high waters in Gujarat state, while thousands were forced to evacuate their homes.
Gujarat forest officials say in a report that the rains also killed at least 10 of the country's 523 lions - the last members of the subspecies left anywhere in the wild.
The report, submitted this weekend to the state's environment ministry, says other lions were found in "weak health and shocked condition" and were given treatment and food supplements.
The deaths underline conservationists' concerns about keeping all of the lions in Gir National Forest in southern Gujarat.


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