Zimbabwe's wildlife authorities have launched an investigation into the deaths of 12 elephants near the Hwange Reserve in western Zimbabwe, the country's largest, a spokesperson said on Sunday. The first conclusions point to the presence of a bacterium.

An investigation has been opened by wildlife authorities in Zimbabwe into the deaths of 12 elephants near the Hwange reserve in the west, the largest in the country, a spokesperson said on Sunday.

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The tracks of poaching and cyanide poisoning excluded

Eleven elephant carcasses were discovered on Friday and a twelfth on Saturday in the Pandamasuwe forest, between Hwange, near the border with Botswana, and the town of Victoria Falls, according to Tinashe Farawo, spokesperson for the Authority in charge. national parks.

"We have ruled out tracks such as poaching because the tusks are intact, or cyanide poisoning because no other animal was affected, including vultures," he said. These are young adults aged 5 to 6 and young people around 18 months old, according to the same source.

The first conclusions point to the presence of a bacterium

Initial findings point to the presence of bacteria because elephants "find themselves in such overpopulation that their favorite vegetation has disappeared and they end up eating anything, including poisonous plants," Tinashe Farawo explained. .

Zimbabwe is home to more than 84,000 elephants, with an estimated capacity of 45,000 to 50,000 individuals. The Hwange reserve houses between 45,000 and 53,000 for a capacity of 15,000, according to the spokesperson. The mysterious deaths this year of more than 300 elephants in neighboring Botswana, which has 130,000 roaming free, the world's largest population, has been attributed to natural toxins.