Image used for representational purposes (Express Photo | Satish Babu) 
Nation

Over 100 migratory birds from California found dead in Tripura's Sukhsagar lake

Gomati Divisional Forest Officer Mahendra Singh and Udaipur Sub-divisional Forest Officer Kamal Bhowmik visited the site on Thursday and collected one carcass for post-mortem examination.

PTI

AGARTALA: More than 100 migratory birds from California in the United States have been found dead in Sukhsagar, a sprawling lake in Tripura's Gomati district, forest officers said on Friday. The carcasses were found floating on the lake, they said.

Gomati Divisional Forest Officer Mahendra Singh and Udaipur Sub-divisional Forest Officer Kamal Bhowmik visited the site on Thursday and collected one carcass for post-mortem examination. "An inquiry has been ordered and the carcass sent to Agartala for autopsy," Singh said, without divulging any further detail.

Another forest officer, on condition of anonymity, said that poachers might have poisoned the water body with pesticides, and the migratory birds, which have been coming from California for the last one decade, might have died after consuming the water.

"The carcasses were found scattered across the water body and it is very difficult to give the exact count. However, it seems that more than 100 birds have died. The reason is yet to be ascertained but prima facie, it seems that the birds died due to insecticides," officials said.

Locals claimed that many people have collected dead birds for consumption and stray dogs have taken away many carcasses.

LS passes Motion of Thanks on President's address without PM's response; House adjoured till 3 pm

'My Didi in Bengal...': Kamal Haasan extends support to Mamata's fight against SIR, slams voter deletion

'Everyone is terrified': Bangladesh's Hindu minority in fear as attacks rise and national election nears

India, US likely to finalise and sign joint statement on trade deal in 4-5 days: Piyush Goyal

Mumbai-Pune Expressway traffic resumes after 33 hours; overturned gas tanker removed

SCROLL FOR NEXT