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posted by LaminatorX on Thursday September 03 2015, @09:22PM   Printer-friendly
from the terrifying-silence dept.

When geoecologist Steffen Zuther and his colleagues arrived in central Kazakhstan to monitor the calving of one herd of saigas, a critically endangered, steppe-dwelling antelope, veterinarians in the area had already reported dead animals on the ground.

"But since there happened to be die-offs of limited extent during the last years, at first we were not really alarmed," Zuther, the international coordinator of the Altyn Dala Conservation Initiative, told Live Science.

But within four days, the entire herd — 60,000 saiga — had died. As veterinarians and conservationists tried to stem the die-off, they also got word of similar population crashes in other herds across Kazakhstan. By early June, the mass dying was over.

Are mass-die-offs like these indications of stress in the larger ecosystem?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 04 2015, @06:27PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 04 2015, @06:27PM (#232368)

    Hmm... could be some sort of environmentally triggered epiphyte toxin in the grasses they eat, that just happens to have hit all at once, in a large area.