Missing for over 50 years: Long-lost elephant shrew resurfaces in Africa

For over 50 years, the Somali sengi (or elephant shrew) has been considered a ” lost species” – until now. The furry, mouse-sized creature with a trunk-like nose is still very much alive, according to researchers in a peer-reviewed study published …

For over 50 years, the Somali sengi (or elephant shrew) has been considered a "lost species" — until now.

The furry, mouse-sized creature with a trunk-like nose is still very much alive, according to researchers in a peer-reviewed study published last week in the journal PeerJ.

"While the species is historically documented as endemic to Somalia, these new records are from the neighboring Republic of Djibouti and thus expand the Somali Sengi’s known range in the Horn of Africa," the four authors wrote, adding that evidence suggests the elephant shrew is also a current inhabitant of Ethiopia.

The Somali sengi was last documented by international researchers in 1968. It since made the Global Wildlife Conservation's "25 Most Wanted Lost Species" list.

But people in East Africa easily recognized the animal when shown pictures of it, Steven Heritage, a Duke University Lemur Center researcher and co-author of the study who credits Djiboutians for a large part of the rediscovery, told NPR.

"Now, the international community will have an eye on our biodiversity," added Houssein Rayaleh, an ecologist from Djibouti and co-author of the study.

Their research team set 1,259 traps — made appetizing with a mixture of rolled oats, peanut butter, and yeast spread — in 12 locations throughout Djibouti last year. It wasn't long before elephant shrews were caught.

What is an elephant shrew (or sengi)? According the the American Wildlife Foundation, not an elephant or shrew, but a small mammal closely related to elephants, sea cows, and aardvarks.

In additional to their iconic trunk-noses, they have a hunchback posture and move in a hopping fashion like rabbits. Sengis live in couples (forming monogamous pairs) and their lifespan is about years.

Sengi fossil records extend back at least 45.6 million years — making the species older than animals like lions or giraffes. Analysis suggest that the Somali sengi has inhabited the Horn of Africa for more than 5.4 million years.

 

Woman killed by alligator after doing client’s nails during lockdown in South Carolina

A woman who was visiting a client for an in-home nail appointment during lockdown in South Carolina was attacked and killed by an alligator in South Carolina, according to a police report released Tuesday. Cynthia Covert, 58, drowned Friday after an …

A woman who was visiting a client for an in-home nail appointment during lockdown in South Carolina was attacked and killed by an alligator in South Carolina, according to a police report released Tuesday.

Cynthia Covert, 58, drowned Friday after an alligator repeatedly pulled her into a pond on Kiawah Island, according to a report from the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office. Her death has been ruled an accident, according to paralegal and public information officer Karli Maratea.

“This unfortunate tragedy reminds citizens to be alert and cautious around our Lowcountry wildlife,” Maratea said. “The Sheriff’s Office urges the public to enjoy the outdoors safely and responsibly.”

Barbara Howell said Covert came to her residence to do her nails with a glass of wine and was “acting strange,” according to the narrative report. Although Gov. Henry McMaster lifted a mandatory stay-home order May 4, South Carolina’s beauty salons must remain closed for now.

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Covert saw the alligator when she was doing Howell’s nails on the porch and when she was finished, she left the porch to take pictures.

Howell said she screamed to Covert that the alligator had grabbed a deer from that spot and Covert replied “I don’t look like a deer” and tried to touch the animal. The alligator grabbed Covert by the leg and started to pull her into the water.

Howell’s husband William told police he heard his wife yelling, went to the porch, and ran down the steps as the gator lunged at Covert. Howell said he and a neighbor, Michael Clawson, threw a rope to Covert and she grabbed it while standing waist deep in the water.

“I guess I won’t do this again,” Covert said, in a very calm voice, according to the witness.

As the pair tried to pull her from the water, the alligator stared to roll and Covert lost her grip on the rope. Clawson told police the alligator took her underwater and she released the rope.

When sheriff’s deputies and the fire department arrived, they saw no movement on the pond, according to the report. Ten or 15 minutes later, Covert’s body surfaced.

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The alligator pulled her back underwater, but resurfaced a few moments later and an officer was able to shoot it. Police retrieved the body which had severe wounds to the left leg.

 

Covert was the third person killed by an alligator in South Carolina in the past four years. Before those attacks, South Carolina had never recorded a person killed by an alligator.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Follow N’dea Yancey-Bragg on Twitter: @NdeaYanceyBragg

 

The US Postal Service is in trouble. What does that mean for FedEx?

MEMPHIS – The U.S. Postal Service is unlikely to shut down due to COVID-19, but changes in its volumes or operations could ripple to FedEx, experts say. Memphis-based FedEx remains closely tied with the ailing Postal Service as both a major customer …

MEMPHIS – The U.S. Postal Service is unlikely to shut down due to COVID-19, but changes in its volumes or operations could ripple to FedEx, experts say.

Memphis-based FedEx remains closely tied with the ailing Postal Service as both a major customer and provider. Alterations to the USPS may translate to risk for FedEx, the company warned in 2019.

“Disruptions or modifications in service by the USPS as a result of financial difficulties or changes in its business, including any structural changes to its operations, network, service offerings or pricing, could adversely affect our operations, negatively impacting our revenue, results of operations and financial condition,” FedEx said in its annual report.

The Postal Service is FedEx Express’ largest customer, FedEx noted in its report — FedEx Express provides domestic air transportation for USPS first-class and priority mail. It also offers transportation and delivery for the USPS internationally.

In 2017, FedEx Express estimated its air transportation contract with the U.S. Postal Service would generate some $1.5 billion annually. They extended their contract at the time through September 2024.

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That extension was well before the COVID-19 pandemic had “a devastating effect on our business” and caused mail volumes to freefall, Postmaster General Megan Brennan said April 10. She called on Congress and President Donald Trump’s administration to act on shoring up the Postal Service’s finances.

The pandemic’s effects have been mixed on Postal Service mail that flies FedEx, said Michael Plunkett, president and CEO of the Association for Postal Commerce, an industry advocacy group that has FedEx and UPS as members.

Plunkett said the Postal Service “has seen an uptick in package volume in the last few weeks,” which could benefit FedEx in the short term with many of those packages traveling on its planes. But first-class mail, which FedEx also flies for the Postal Service, has been “down considerably,” he added.

Even if Postal Service volume falls, a lack of air cargo capacity could drive more Postal Service business to FedEx.

The Postal Service relies on FedEx and other airlines to deliver urgent mail on time. If passenger planes continue to be grounded due to the coronavirus, some Postal Service mail will need to shift from those passenger flights to dedicated FedEx and UPS cargo planes, said postal industry consultant Robert Fisher.

FedEx did not respond to a request for comment on the matter Thursday.

Pandemic accelerates USPS cash drain

While FedEx has faced its own struggles in the past several quarters, they don’t compare to what the Postal Service is experiencing. Revenues were already going downhill for the Postal Service before COVID-19 hastened a gloomy financial situation.

FedEx CEO Fred Smith told Southeastern Asset Management in 2019 that the company’s “best projections” on when the Postal Service will run out of money point to 2022. FedEx and Amazon keeping more of their own deliveries in-house has led to less business for the Postal Service, he said.

COVID-19 accelerated that timeline. Officials with the Postal Service warned that the pandemic’s effects “could shutter the Postal Service’s doors as early as June,” U.S. Reps. Carolyn B. Maloney and Gerry Connolly wrote in March.

“We now estimate that the COVID-19 pandemic will increase the Postal Service’s net operating loss by more than $22 billion dollars over the next eighteen months, and by over $54 billion dollars over the longer term, threatening our ability to operate,” Brennan said in the April 10 statement.

Congress recently approved $10 billion for the Postal Service to borrow. Postal Service officials estimate this will allow it to keep operating until April 2021, when further relief will be needed, Plunkett said. If no relief comes to the Postal Service by then, he said the agency could reach the point where it can’t pay its biggest expenses: employee salaries and benefits.

“There will be some pressure on all sides to not be perceived as the reason the Postal Service goes under,” Plunkett said. “It’s going to get messy, and perhaps ugly, in the next few weeks. We’re hopeful something gets done.”

FedEx uses Postal Service for some deliveries

On the ground, the Postal Service provides a cost-effective service with 100% delivery coverage for FedEx through FedEx SmartPost, in which a Postal Service courier makes the final-mile delivery.

If the Postal Service had to cut back on its operations, large customers like FedEx and UPS would take a financial hit, Plunkett said. The two companies often hand off inefficient deliveries destined for rural, faraway locations to the Postal Service.

“They go to every residence in the U.S., no matter what the population density is,” Plunkett said of the Postal Service. “If FedEx and UPS were in a situation where they had to make deliveries to those locations, their costs would go up.”

FedEx already began distancing itself from the Postal Service in 2019, when it announced it would insource into FedEx Ground nearly 2 million daily packages that were destined for SmartPost.

 

Kevin Sterling, managing director and analyst at The Benchmark Company, said the move made sense for FedEx, since it helps shield the company from future Postal Service shakeups, like reducing operating days or the number of addresses it serves.

“What I think FedEx is doing is smart, to bring what they can into their own network so if things do get cut (from the Postal Service), it won’t shock the system too bad,” Sterling said.

FedEx is “roughly halfway there” in moving that Postal Service volume in its own network, COO Raj Subramaniam said in a March earnings call. He summed up the move as “purely an economic decision,” providing FedEx Ground drivers with more packages per route and boosting delivery efficiency.

The current SmartPost product “will be rebranded in the future,” Chief Marketing Officer Brie Carere said on the call, with FedEx giving sub-pound volume to the post office when needed.

Max Garland covers FedEx, logistics and health care for The Commercial Appeal. Reach him at max.garland@commercialappeal.com or 901-529-2651 and on Twitter @MaxGarlandTypes.