Bangladesh forest experts warned Tuesday a key tiger habitat hit by a deadly cyclone had been submerged by seawater deeper and longer than ever before, raising fears for endangered wildlife.
Cyclone Remal, which made landfall in low-lying Bangladesh and neighboring India on Sunday evening, killed at least 38 people in both nations and affected millions more.
More than a million people fled inland to concrete storm shelters before the cyclone hit.
But it was the vast Sundarbans mangrove forest straddling Bangladesh and India — where the Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna rivers meet the sea — that took the brunt of the force.
The forest, which hosts one of the world’s largest populations of Bengal tigers, was swamped, said Mihir Kumar Doe, the head of Bangladesh’s southern forest department.
“The entire Sundarbans was underwater for more than 36 hours during the cyclone,” Doe told AFP.
“All its freshwater ponds, numbering more than 100, were washed away by saline tidal water.”
At least 114 Bengal tigers live in Bangladesh’s portion of the Sundarbans, according to official figures.
Abu Naser Mohsin Hossain, Bangladesh’s senior forest official for the Sundarbans, had said he feared for the wildlife if the freshwater lakes were tainted.
“We are worried,” said Hossain. “These ponds were the source of fresh water for the entire wildlife in the mangroves — including the endangered Bengal tigers.”
The Sundarbans, the world’s biggest mangrove forest, is regularly battered by intense monsoon storms.
But Azizur Rahman, director of the state-run Bangladesh Meteorological Department, said the cyclone was “one of the longest in the country’s history,” blaming climate change for the shift.
Doe said his teams had recovered dozens of dead spotted deer, as well as boars, the tigers’ main prey.
“We are very concerned over the wild animals including tigers,” Doe said.
“The Sundarbans is such a dynamic ecosystem, it is tough to know whether any tigers or wild animals were washed away or died.”
Mangroves grow mainly in seawater or brackish water but Doe said the flooding was on a scale he had not witnessed before.
“This 36-hour inundation is very unusual,” he said, noting that it was three times longer than during Cyclone Sidr in 2007.
During the latest cyclone, areas nearer the sea were three meters (10 feet) underwater, while areas further upstream were under 1.2-1.5 meters (4-5 feet) of water.
“Even during low tide, the water did not recede,” Doe said. “This is very unusual.”
Tiger expert Monirul Khan, zoology professor at Jahangirnagar University, said he feared smaller animals such as deer would be hardest hit.
“I fear for the animals who are less strong such as spotted deer,” he said.
“Spotted deer are helpless to strong tides during cyclones or longer inundation of the forest. But Bengal tigers can climb trees.”