Animals
Kangra town received the highest 103mm of rainfall followed by Palampur and Paonta Sahib that got 70mm each. Dharamshala received 58mm of rainfall, Malan and Arki 44mm each, Shahpur 38mm, Joginderngar 33.5mm, Sundernagar 17mm and Sarkaghat 16mm. State capital Shimla got 11mm of rainfall.
The meteorological department has forecast heavy to very heavy rains over the coming days. "Adverse weather will prevail till June 16 with heavy to very heavy rain likely in most parts of Himachal Pradesh," said Shimla meteorological centre director Manmohan Singh.
A yellow weather warning for thunderstorms and lightning has been issued till June 13.
Livestock bear brunt in Baijnath
Nearly 300 sheep and goats were killed by lightning in the Manai Dhar area of Baijnath subdivision.

A diver looking for shark teeth is attacked by an alligator in a Florida river and survives.
CNN reported that 25-year-old Jeffrey Heim sustained a skull fracture from an alligator attack last Sunday on Florida's Myakka River, in Sarasota County. The wound to the back of his head required 34 staples to close, and Heim also had puncture wounds on his hand from the alligator's bite.
Initially, the Tampa man thought he'd been hit by a boat propeller, the report said, but then saw the alligator looking at him.
Heim described the attack to CNN, saying, "It felt very heavy and it really felt like it was moving very fast." He added, "It felt blunt. It felt like a blunt force. I didn't feel the cutting, I felt a pulling."

A sub-adult Sperm whale washed up on the shore of a popular local hotspot, Shell Island.
NOAA officials are looking into the death of a sub-adult sperm whale found at a popular local hotspot, Shell Island.
According to officials with NOAA, this species of whale is considered endangered. It's primarily found in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
They say this is one of three sperm whale strandings along the Gulf over the last 10 years.
Officials are unsure what caused the whale's death. They do say the whale was very thin when it beached itself.
A necropsy will be conducted Tuesday morning to determine the cause of death.

Linda Stathoplos, a retired NOAA researcher and oceanographer, searches the base of the jetty for remnants of bugs that washed ashore on Wells Beach on Tuesday. Stathoplos used a microscope to determine that the remains of small black flies likely stained the feet of beachgoers.
He first noticed it Sunday night. When he went back out Monday, it was there again. He talked to about a dozen beachgoers who all said they noticed it too.
"I sat on the edge of my tub with blue Dawn (dishwashing soap) and a scrub pad, and I still couldn't remove the stain from my feet," Smith said.
It took a few inquiries to local and state officials, and some help from a retired scientist who lives nearby, but Smith got his answer Tuesday. It only raised more questions.

A second dead minke whale has washed up on a beach up the coast from where another 40ft mammal was found days earlier.
Coastguards have urged holidaymakers and onlookers to stay away after the 27ft-long whale was found on Boulmer Beach in Northumberland.
Dead whales have been known to explode due to a build up of gasses as they decompose.
Howick Coastguard Rescue Team were called after a walker spotted the whale on the rocks on Friday (4/6) lunchtime.
A spokesperson said: "Sadly an 8.1 metre whale was found deceased on the rocks.
"It appeared to have been dead for some time.
Emergency services were called to a Milton Road property just after 9:00am following reports of dogs attacking a person.
Acting Inspector Wade Lee said the woman sustained serious injuries to her head, chest and left arm.
The 41-year-old woman was visiting the house when she was mauled by the pit bulls.
She died at the scene.
It is understood the baby was attacked by the dog in her bedroom in the terraced house in Clashmore, near the Co Cork border.
Parademics and gardaí treated the baby at the scene before rushing the infant to Cork University Hospital (CUH).
The three-month-old baby was later pronounced dead at the hospital at around 3.00 am.
Gardaí from Dungarvan, Co Waterford have begun an investigation into the incident and the scene at the house has been preserved for examination.

Experts are perplexed by an illness afflicting local birds where their eyes crust over and cause other neurological symptoms
DC resident Alexandra Dimsdale found a young grackle stumbling around outside her home on Saturday.
After taking it to City Wildlife, a rehabilitation centre in the northwest part of the capital, she told The Washington Post that a member of staff said there was nothing they could do. She learned that the bird probably had some kind of neurological illness, causing it to go blind.
It's not unusual for elephants to ramble outside their habitats, but this wandering herd stands out. Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz, a principal investigator at the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, who specializes in elephants, told The New York Times he has "no idea" why these elephants won't settle in one spot.
The elephants started off last March, leaving a nature reserve in Xishuangbanna, and have traveled more than 300 miles (500 kilometers) so far. There were 16 in the group then, but some have turned around, and others have given birth, making the group now down to 15, the Times reports.
He and his partner, Laura, were walking along the beach at Harataonga, on Great Barrier Island, when they made the discovery on Sunday.
"I just saw a lump in the sand," he told the Herald.
On closer inspection, they realised it was a dead whale shark.
"It was about 6m long and looked like it had been there for about a week.
"I've never seen a whale shark before. It's not something you expect to see around here, especially at this time."
The Department of Conservation confirmed their staff responded to a public sighting of the dead whale shark last Thursday.
It was a significant find as although whale sharks migrate annually to New Zealand waters, this was the first recorded stranding in New Zealand, a DoC spokeswoman said.









Comment: It remains to be seen what is afflicting the young birds but that it seems to be confined within a particular locality and to certain species and age is notable. In recent years there have been numerous reports of birds suffering due to starvation, illness, as well as mysteriously dying en masse: