< %=imgalt%>
Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip
Home / India News / 2007 / August 2007 / August 18, 2007
Frolicking pachyderms create scare in West Bengal

Top News

Praja Rajyam membership drive from October 2

Indias silent tragedy: Maternal mortality finds a voice

Pizza Hut renamed Pasta Hut to promote healthy eating

Coldplay bag two prizes at the Q Awards

Nano likely to roll-out of Gujarat

Englands 1966 World Cup win is Brits Most-Watched TV Event

Girls struggle more than boys to adjust in language-learning environment

The Future of the Internet IDATE's 30Th Annual International Conference 19 & 20 November 2008 - Le Corum, Montpellier (France) Guest Country South Korea

Frolicking pachyderms create scare in West Bengal

Two wild elephants created a scare in West Bengal, as they frolicked in a river close to human habitation before vanishing back into the woods.

Burdwan (West Bengal), Aug 18 : Two wild elephants created a scare in West Bengal, as they frolicked in a river close to human habitation before vanishing back into the woods.

The pachyderms, which presumably got separated from a heard migrating across the forest in Purulia district, were spotted frolicking in the Damodar River near Maithon dam in Burdwan district.

The residents feared that the elephants might run over their fields and pull down their dwellings but the harmless animals made merry in the river waters before vanishing back into the woods.

"We have got the information that the elephants have strayed here and we kept a watch on their movements," said Gopi Halda, a constable.

With forests areas fast depleting, elephants seeking food, come to villages and sometimes raid the fields.

Some emerge from the jungle to take advantage of the paddy harvest, others have discovered a taste for local liquor, and drink everything they can lay their trunks on.

From China to Indonesia, India to Vietnam, Asian elephants are in danger, their habitats shrinking fast, and their communities increasingly isolated.

According to the 2005 national census, there are between 25,000 to 28,000 elephants in India, including 1,500 male tuskers of breeding age.

Elephants are a protected and endangered species in India, with the country having nearly half of the world's 60,000 Asian elephants.

But conservationists say the pachyderm population has fallen rapidly in recent years because of a loss of habitat caused by human encroachment in forest areas, leading to human-elephant conflicts.

ANI

October 7, 2008

October 6, 2008

October 5, 2008

October 4, 2008

October 3, 2008

October 2, 2008