The Fort Worth Press - Habitat loss stokes rabid jackal attacks in Bangladesh

USD -
AED 3.673005
AFN 72.568386
ALL 89.799374
AMD 392.670872
ANG 1.790208
AOA 916.50389
ARS 1076.350497
AUD 1.61547
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.68931
BAM 1.780379
BBD 2.027818
BDT 122.024487
BGN 1.78674
BHD 0.376924
BIF 2985.544713
BMD 1
BND 1.35268
BOB 6.940184
BRL 5.819203
BSD 1.004296
BTN 87.183128
BWP 14.246897
BYN 3.286787
BYR 19600
BZD 2.017441
CAD 1.406785
CDF 2874.99981
CHF 0.854298
CLF 0.025578
CLP 981.530175
CNY 7.35005
CNH 7.348495
COP 4302.25
CRC 516.585348
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 100.36591
CZK 22.840507
DJF 178.839957
DKK 6.801096
DOP 62.509103
DZD 133.58497
EGP 51.705389
ERN 15
ETB 132.841785
EUR 0.910885
FJD 2.3053
FKP 0.783371
GBP 0.77817
GEL 2.754997
GGP 0.783371
GHS 15.568148
GIP 0.783371
GMD 71.506935
GNF 8694.187793
GTQ 7.746011
GYD 210.127216
HKD 7.76287
HNL 26.02019
HRK 6.8581
HTG 131.422875
HUF 368.749739
IDR 16774.4
ILS 3.739897
IMP 0.783371
INR 86.22525
IQD 1315.746354
IRR 42099.999878
ISK 132.159865
JEP 0.783371
JMD 158.797346
JOD 0.708898
JPY 146.837015
KES 129.504446
KGS 87.391102
KHR 4022.703377
KMF 449.500961
KPW 900.005689
KRW 1458.034965
KWD 0.3077
KYD 0.837028
KZT 521.387673
LAK 21756.149071
LBP 89511.667615
LKR 302.328545
LRD 200.859252
LSL 19.807017
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.567187
MAD 9.550261
MDL 17.827298
MGA 4655.206157
MKD 56.001566
MMK 2099.508213
MNT 3514.239504
MOP 8.027382
MRU 39.791729
MUR 45.229839
MVR 15.410079
MWK 1741.560504
MXN 20.3271
MYR 4.4755
MZN 63.898309
NAD 19.807197
NGN 1570.500193
NIO 36.957472
NOK 10.73468
NPR 139.500441
NZD 1.75575
OMR 0.384991
PAB 1.004342
PEN 3.761322
PGK 4.148195
PHP 57.221972
PKR 281.84223
PLN 3.871921
PYG 8036.738335
QAR 3.661378
RON 4.533602
RSD 106.718006
RUB 86.000464
RWF 1422.322961
SAR 3.753893
SBD 8.323254
SCR 14.329296
SDG 600.502269
SEK 9.961398
SGD 1.340055
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.759735
SLL 20969.501083
SOS 573.935761
SRD 36.942498
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.788028
SYP 13001.930666
SZL 19.822313
THB 34.094025
TJS 10.911408
TMT 3.51
TND 3.095856
TOP 2.342097
TRY 37.969959
TTD 6.811706
TWD 32.834969
TZS 2677.494969
UAH 41.472935
UGX 3709.519583
UYU 43.053621
UZS 13017.395975
VES 73.265931
VND 25823
VUV 126.014532
WST 2.882742
XAF 597.108929
XAG 0.032033
XAU 0.00032
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.742612
XOF 597.095341
XPF 108.562768
YER 245.295535
ZAR 19.307699
ZMK 9001.197535
ZMW 28.21213
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    60.2700

    60.27

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.3900

    22.6

    +1.73%

  • SCS

    0.8700

    10.61

    +8.2%

  • RIO

    3.2900

    55.61

    +5.92%

  • BCC

    8.5100

    98.44

    +8.64%

  • BTI

    0.6600

    40.21

    +1.64%

  • JRI

    0.5200

    11.99

    +4.34%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    34.48

    +1.02%

  • NGG

    2.4700

    65.21

    +3.79%

  • CMSD

    0.3700

    22.75

    +1.63%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    9.3

    +1.08%

  • RELX

    3.2300

    48.54

    +6.65%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    21

    +0.62%

  • VOD

    0.3900

    8.58

    +4.55%

  • AZN

    1.8600

    66.76

    +2.79%

  • BP

    1.7900

    27.9

    +6.42%

Habitat loss stokes rabid jackal attacks in Bangladesh
Habitat loss stokes rabid jackal attacks in Bangladesh / Photo: © AFP

Habitat loss stokes rabid jackal attacks in Bangladesh

Few in the Jahan family's remote Bangladeshi village had seen a jackal up close before the morning one stalked Musqan through the paddy fields, pounced on her, and maimed the four-year-old for life.

Text size:

Violent and unprovoked attacks by rabid canines are rising around the South Asian nation due to rampant deforestation and habitat loss -- a trend experts say has been worsened by climate change.

Musqan is still recovering from the horrific injuries she sustained in the mauling last month by the rabid jackal. While she is rabies-free thanks to prompt treatment, her face is disfigured by bite wounds and one of her eyes remains swollen shut.

"It happened in broad daylight," her aunt Ishrat Jahan told AFP.

"A jackal pushed her to the ground and blindly bit her. Other villagers later killed it, but they are still traumatised by what happened."

Golden jackals like the one that maimed Musqan are slender, wolf-like creatures found across Bangladesh, about the same size as a greyhound but lighter in weight.

What made the attack on Musqan unusual was its timing -- she was bitten in the daytime, but golden jackals are a nocturnal species.

Animal researcher Zoheb Mahmud of Independent University in Dhaka told AFP that his studies of golden jackals over eight years showed that the "gradual erosion of habitats" had altered their behaviour.

"I found the once-shy creatures had begun staring at us," he said. "They are supposed to come out in the evening or at night, but we saw them during the day."

Urbanisation and logging have led to major human encroachment on the habitats where much of Bangladesh's jackal population resides.

According to monitoring group Global Forest Watch, Bangladesh last year lost 17,800 hectares (44,000 acres) of forest cover -- an area roughly three times the size of Manhattan.

Mahmud warned that jackal attacks on humans "would not stop" if the habitat loss continued.

- 'In crisis' -

Bangladesh is one the countries ranked most vulnerable to climate change, and there are signs that more extreme weather is making attacks more likely.

The country saw widespread flooding in September that displaced millions of people in the worst-hit areas for the second year running, with floodwaters coursing through forests and driving out their canine inhabitants.

"Due to the flood, the jackals lost their dwellings and food," jackal bite victim Obaidul Islam told AFP from Nilphamari in the country's north.

"So they came and bit more than a dozen people in our village."

Rakibul Hasan Mukul, executive director of civil society wildlife group Arannayk, told AFP that climate change was driving more extreme and frequent flooding in Bangladesh.

He said changes to the weather were also eroding farmlands, displacing their human inhabitants and prompting them to cut down more forests.

"The loss of land has also resulted in increased conflicts between humans and wildlife," he added.

"People are cutting bushes around wetlands and their homesteads for farming. As a result, small mammals are in crisis, losing their habitats."

- 'Rip out flesh' -

While Bangladesh's health ministry does not maintain specific records on jackal bites, reports from hospitals indicate an alarming and possibly unprecedented frequency of attacks this year.

The Munshiganj District Hospital, south of Dhaka, treated 20 people for bites on just a single day in September.

"I have never seen so many people coming in with jackal bites on a single day before," hospital superintendent Dewan Nizam Uddin Ahmed told AFP.

Another hospital administrator in Dinajpur, on the other side of the country, told AFP there had been 12 cases in one day at his facility.

"We are regularly getting bite patients," Dinajpur Hospital superintendent Mohammad Fazlur Rahman said. "The jackals are roaming freely through the farmland."

Golden jackals are by nature shy and usually avoid human contact unless they contract rabies, a disease that quickly turns them bold and aggressive as its symptoms take hold.

Endemic across Bangladesh, rabies spreads quickly among canine species when infected animals bite and draw blood from other creatures.

The disease is almost guaranteed to lead to a prolonged and painful death in humans once symptoms show. Prompt intervention is needed to stop the disease in its tracks.

After Musqan was bitten last month, she received treatment for three days to prevent a rabies infection, followed by a month in hospital for surgeries related to her wounds, and is still deeply traumatised by the attack.

"We can prevent rabies with vaccines," Ariful Bashar, one of the doctors at the hospital treating Musqan, told AFP.

"But most of the time, jackals rip out flesh, deforming their victims. Almost all of them then need reconstructive surgery."

J.P.Cortez--TFWP

Advertisement Image