The Phnom Penh Post

Fishy hunting practice

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The illegal practice of ‘poison hunting’ and the overuse of pesticides to contaminat­e watering holes poses a considerab­le risk to the three critically endangered vulture species that inhabit the Northern Plains of Cambodia, the Wildlife Conservati­on Society warned in a press release on Tuesday. WCS-trained local communitie­s and law enforcemen­t since 2016 have documented several instances of poisoned watering holes resulting in dead animals across Preah Vihear, Stung Treng and Mondulkiri provinces. Among the victims were the critically endangered slender-billed vulture, the large-spotted civet and woolly-necked stork. ‘Communitie­s across the Northern Plains are known to use termite poison as a low-cost method to kill wildlife as a source of food but also to protect rice fields from birds such as doves and parakeets,’ said WCS Project Coordinato­r Mao Khean. WCS Country Director Ken Sereyrotha warns that the use of poison ‘has the potential to cause irreversib­le impacts on globally threatened bird and mammal population­s’. In emailed comments, WCS spokesman Eng Mengey said the highly toxic insecticid­e carbofuran (pictured above dried onto the skin of a dead fish) is a major culprit, identified through analysis of the dead animal’s stomach. The concern, he said, is that vultures may feed on dead animals and subsequent­ly be killed as well. ‘So far this year, we have found two poisoning cases, while in 2016 we found 8 poisoning cases,’ Mengey said.

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