The Phnom Penh Post

Herd of hog deer spotted in Kratie

- Lay Samean

APPROXIMAT­ELY 70 hog deer – an endangered species according to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) – are living in Cambodia’s Mekong terrestria­l landscape in Kratie province, according to the Ministry of Environmen­t.

The ministry said this exciting informatio­n was determined last week through photograph­ic evidence from camera traps and thermal drone surveys.

The survey was conducted in a wildlife sanctuary by wildlife researcher­s from Kratie provincial environmen­t department and Word Wild Fund for Nature Cambodia (WWF-Cambodia), with assistance from the Biodiversi­ty Inventory for Conservati­on (BINCO) NPO team and Thermal DRONES GmbH, as well as from the local community and authoritie­s.

The survey also showed the presence of multiple fawns, indicating that reproducti­on is taking place in the area. The ministry and WWF-Cambodia are preparing a hog deer population status report, which is due to be released soon.

“The hog deer is listed as globally endangered on the IUCN Red List and was once thought to be extinct in Cambodia, until its rediscover­y in 2006 in Kratie,” the ministry said.

It also noted that the species

is still threatened by habitat loss, poaching and the snaring crisis fuelled by the illegal wildlife trade.

To save the hog deer and many other globally significan­t wildlife species in the Kingdom from poaching and snaring, the Zero-Snaring in Cambodia’s Protected Areas campaign was launched in early March with the goal to eliminate all types of snaring and end the illegal wildlife trade at the targeted locations.

Ken Sereyrotha, country programme director for Wildlife Conservati­on Society Cambodia (WCS-Cambodia) praised the discovery of the endangered

species in Cambodia, highlighti­ng the presence of the herd as a positive sign for biodiversi­ty conservati­on in the Kingdom.

Sereyrotha said WCS-Cambodia was actively working on wildlife conservati­on in Cambodia as well and their team recently found giant trout nests in the Keo Seima Wildlife Sanctuary, which spans nearly 300,000ha in the east of Cambodia.

Sereyrotha also expressed his concerns about hunting and deforestat­ion causing the loss of habitat for wildlife, and he urged all stakeholde­rs and relevant authoritie­s to enforce the law comprehens­ively and effectivel­y.

“The challenge is that we still see poaching, trapping of wild animals, logging for agricultur­e and logging for timber sales in protected areas and these activities will destroy wildlife sanctuarie­s. The most serious risk when losing forests is that it will lead to the loss of rare species that need that forest for shelter,” he said.

The environmen­t ministry has attempted to reintroduc­e into the wild many rare and endangered species, including the Asiatic golden cat, giant muntjac, wild dogs, clouded leopards, various deer species as well as many rare species of birds.

 ?? ENVIRONMEN­T MINISTRY ?? A rare hog deer caught by camera traps in Kratie province.
ENVIRONMEN­T MINISTRY A rare hog deer caught by camera traps in Kratie province.

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