Lightning strike
continues its havoc last weekend when it killed over 300 reindeer in Norway
according to a report by the Associated Press.
More than 300 wild
reindeer were killed by a lightning strike in central Norway, according to the
Norwegian Environment Agency.
During the weekend, the
agency released startling images showing a mass of reindeer carcasses scattered
across a small area on the Hardangervidda mountain plateau.
The incident, while rare,
is not without precedent in other parts of the world, where lightning bolts
have killed large numbers of cattle, elk and other animals that were clustered
together during a thunderstorm.
The agency says 323
animals were killed, including 70 calves, in the lightning storm on Friday.
This area is home to about 2,000 reindeer at this time of the year, the agency
said.
Agency spokesman Kjartan
Knutsen told The Associated Press it's not uncommon for reindeer or
other wildlife to be killed by lightning strikes but this was an unusually
deadly event.
"We have not heard about such
numbers before," he said Monday.
He said reindeer tend to stay very
close to each other in bad weather, which could explain how so many were killed
at once.
"I don't know if there were several
lightning strikes," he said. "But it happened in one
moment."
Knutsen said the agency is now
discussing what to do with the dead animals.
Normally, they are just left where they
are to let nature take its course, he said.
Thousands of reindeer migrate across
the barren Hardangervidda plateau as the seasons change.
In the U.S., cattle, elk and other
animals are far more likely to die from lightning than people are.
In May of this year, lightning killed
21 cattle in South Dakota that were feeding around a metal feeding trough
during a thunderstorm. In that case, lightning's current of electricity
traveled through the trough, into the cattle, and also into the ground.
In the Norwegian incident, it's
possible the electrical current from a single bolt, or multiple bolts, proved
fatal because the animals were in contact with one another, enabling the
electrical current to travel through multiple animals.
According to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 32 people have been killed by lightning in
the U.S. so far this year.
The Associated Press contributed
reporting.
No comments:
Post a Comment