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New home for Cambodian killer elephant Phnom Penh (AFP) Dec 27, 2010 An enraged bull elephant that killed its owner and then went on a 10-day rampage in the Cambodian countryside has been taken in by a wildlife rescue centre. The bull elephant, named Sambo, terrorised villagers in the southwestern province of Kampong Speu and destroyed their crops before he was subdued by wildlife workers on December 15. The five-tonne animal was confined to a rice field for over a week while a special cage was built to transport him to the Phnom Tamao rescue centre on the outskirts of the Cambodian capital. Sambo -- who has displayed violent behaviour in the past and is thought to have killed four people over the years -- arrived at the centre on Saturday evening, a late Christmas present for the animal sanctuary. "He has been placed in a temporary enclosure for the time being," said communications officer John Maloy from the Wildlife Alliance, adding that Sambo was being kept away from the zoo's five other Asian elephants. "Sambo is probably too dangerous to mix with them at present," he told AFP. The Wildlife Alliance believes Sambo is in musth -- a periodic condition in bull elephants that is often accompanied by highly aggressive behaviour. His handlers hope that eventually Sambo will calm down and find a mate at the rescue centre. Cambodia is home to about 120 domesticated elephants, according to Jack Highwood who heads the Elephants Livelihood Initiative Environment, a local organisation that assisted in Sambo's transfer. While there are no official statistics, Highwood estimates that six people have been killed by elephants in Cambodia in the last three years, including Sambo's victims. In all of those cases it was by a male elephant in musth. The Asian elephant is listed as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
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Fossil find shows extinction recovery Luoping, China (UPI) Dec 23, 2010 A new fossil site in China is providing clues to how life on Earth recovered from one of the greatest mass extinctions in the planet's history, researchers say. Around 250 million years ago, at the end of the Permian period, a sustained period of massive volcanic eruptions and devastating global warming wiped out almost all life on the planet, with only about 10 percent of species survi ... read more |
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