Earth Changes
Storms had battered Karachi, the country's biggest city, for three hours.
Officials had set the death toll at 43.
But Health Minister of Sindh Sardar Ahmed said welfare organisation Edhi Trust had received bodies of another 185 people killed in rain-related accidents.
"Now the total number of those killed because of rain is 228," he said.
"These deaths are caused by electrocution, falling trees, house collapses and road accidents."
Edhi Trust spokesman Anwar Kazmi said most deaths had taken place in the low-lying areas of the sprawling city.
Severe water pollution has decimated the city's once thriving frog population that fed on mosquito larvae, curbing the spread of dengue, malaria and encephalitis, The Times of London said.
Scientists found the twisted-faced creature, called the Maclaud's horseshoe bat, while surveying the highland forests of Guinea in West Africa this spring.
German biologist Natalie Weber took this picture after finding 16 members of the species in a series of remote caves. The bat had never been photographed before and had not been seen in the wild in nearly 40 years.
"Our rediscovery is good news insofar as the species is still there and as we have shown that the distribution range appears to be somewhat larger than previously known," said Jakob Fahr, an ecologist with Germany's University of Ulm, who coordinated the survey.
The Environment Agency has four flood watches in place - at Faustian Beck and Pinxton near Nottingham, the River Doe Lea in Derbyshire, and Frisby near Leicester.
And flooding is also causing problems on the railways, disrupting the journeys of thousands of passengers.
A Network Rail spokesman said the east coast mainline outside Nottingham is blocked by a landslip and the west coast mainline south of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire is also blocked both ways.
Sweat was driving home April 16 when he spotted smoke along the dirt road to his tobacco farm. Power lines were snapped by fallen pine and flames climbed surrounding trees. He dashed home to call the fire department, but the blaze had already spread.
It would become the Southeast's biggest wildfire since 1898, according to the National Interagency Fire Center.
''If I could have just been here a little bit earlier, before it got into those roots, I could've outed it,'' he said.
Within a day, the wildfire burned a 9-mile path through rural timberland. A week later, the blaze had destroyed 18 homes and spread into the Okefenokee Swamp.
The fire services were called out to more than 400 locations throughout Hungary on Thursday evening, mostly because of fallen trees and damaged roofs, Tibor Dobson said.