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Australia heatwave: Dozens of wild horses perish at dried-up waterhole

‘It’s just terrible to know these beautiful animals died this way,’ says man who discovered shocking scene

Isabelle Gerretsen
Wednesday 23 January 2019 09:36 EST
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More than 20 decomposing horses were discovered at a dried-up pool in northern Australia
More than 20 decomposing horses were discovered at a dried-up pool in northern Australia (Facebook/Alice Springs Community Forum)

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Dozens of wild horses have been found dead in Australia amid an extreme heatwave in the region.

More than 20 decomposing horses were discovered at a dried-up pool, known as “Deep Hole”, 56 miles east of Alice Springs, a remote town in Australia’s Northern Territory.

Pictures published on Facebook showed the dead animals strewn on the scorched ground, covered in dust and branches.

In a Facebook post, Alice Springs residents said that the horses “are likely to have perished from dehydration accompanied by the overwhelming heat”.

“The prospect of any living creatures perishing in this way has left many locals devastated. All feral animals need to be managed with effective strategies to minimise their impact on the environment and to alleviate any suffering,” the post read.

Artist Ralph Turner discovered the shocking scene last week when he went to investigate the pool’s water levels.

He told ABC News that he had never witnessed an animal death of this scale in the region.

“We’ve been having hot weather, day after day. We found all these poor horses, all perished,” Mr Turner said.

“It’s just terrible to know these beautiful animals died this way,” he added.

Australia has been in the grip of a searing heatwave for the past fortnight, notching five of its 10 hottest days on record.

More than a million fish have died in a river in New South Wales amid the arid conditions and bat deaths have been reported on a “biblical scale”.

Temperatures in Alice Springs are forecast to reach 43C this week, according to the Bureau of Meteorology.

A town in New South Wales recorded a night-time low temperature of 35.9C – Australia’s highest minimum temperature on record – and in Adelaide dozens of people were taken to hospital due to heat-related conditions.

The Bureau of Meteorology’s State of the Climate 2018 report blamed climate change for the increased intensity in heatwaves and warned of “further increases in sea and air temperatures, with more hot days and marine heatwaves”.

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