France24 – AFP, 31 October 2017
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| AFP/File | The Baikal seal is the smallest in the world |
Around 130
dead seals have washed up on the shores of Russia's Lake Baikal, authorities
said Tuesday, as they launched a probe into the latest problem to hit the
world's deepest lake.
The Baikal
seal is the smallest in the world, and exactly how and when the species
colonised the ancient Siberian lake is still a mystery.
"There
were about 130 animals found dead" over the past few days, said
environmental ministry spokesman Nikolai Gudkov.
"We
took water samples to understand whether we can talk of water pollution as the
reason," he told AFP, though results have not yet been processed.
Scientists
have also taken biopsies of the animals, he said.
The animal
is not endangered and Gudkov said the species' population has actually
increased in recent years, growing to around 130,000.
Preliminary
theories about the die-off did not suggest pollution is the reason, he added.
Lake
Baikal, a UNESCO World Heritage Site which has thousands of endemic species,
has been suffering from a string of detrimental phenomena over recent years.
These
include depletion of fish stocks, death of endemic sponges and explosion of
growth of Spirogyra algae unnatural to the lake which scientists say is caused
by pollution.
Around 130 dead seals wash up on shores of Russia's Lake Baikal, latest problem to hit the world's deepest lake https://t.co/Z4UnF4AYFH pic.twitter.com/NAv2W6C5pq— AFP news agency (@AFP) October 31, 2017

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