The Phnom Penh Post

BirdLife trains field team at Stung Sen

- Lay Samean

THE Phsort field monitoring team is ready to collect data on rare species of birds, fish and endangered species in Cambodia at the Stung Sen Ramsar site along the southeaste­rn edge of the Tonle Sap Lake and to alert authoritie­s to any illegal or suspicious activities seen there while doing so.

BirdLife Internatio­nal Cambodia – in collaborat­ion with NatureLife Cambodia and under the financial and technical assistance of the Critical Ecosystem Partnershi­p Fund (CEPF) – set up a data collection project in the Stung Sen Chap Ramsar Dolphin Area from April to December of this year.

In order to facilitate the effective collection of data through the project, four residents of Phsort were selected for training in field practices and the regular monitoring of biodiversi­ty.

To ensure the Phsort team had the necessary practical knowledge and skills, NatureLife Cambodia organised a

short training session on the use of GPS, biodiversi­ty patrol methods and how to write a monthly patrol report to four representa­tives on May 1.

The Phsort field monitoring team is required to conduct patrols at least twice a month to collect data on rare birds, endangered species, habitat and water conditions.

They must also document any illegal activities taking

place and then report them to the rangers of the Stung Sen Ramsar site for further action.

The Phsort team is preparing for an upcoming patrol in May of 2022, when they will visit a number of key locations such as Trong Jruk and Kampong Roteah.

Muong Bunmat of BirdLife Internatio­nal Cambodia and the Lumphat Wildlife Sanctuary of Mondulkiri province said that as a project implemente­r, he thought they did a very good job on setting it up and that it could help preserve wildlife and biodiversi­ty in Cambodia.

“Because every day animals in Cambodia are lost... This project is good for conservati­on because our country is rich in natural resources and wildlife. But today the destructio­n of forests by traders or hunters ensure that both forests and animals continue to lose. If conservati­on is done correctly, it will help animals survive for future generation­s to see,” he said.

He added that hunters continued to trap animals out of ignorance and were even doing so in the wildlife sanctuarie­s and it remained a huge risk factor for the loss of entire species.

Cambodia has five Ramsar sites including Koh Kapi, Prek Toal , Stung Sen , Tonle Chhmar and Stung Treng . Ramsar sites are wetlands conservati­on areas so named because they were establishe­d by a 1971 internatio­nal convention signed in Ramsar, Iran, which Cambodia later signed onto.

 ?? NATURELIFE CAMBODIA ?? The field team at the Stung Sen Ramsar site in May.
NATURELIFE CAMBODIA The field team at the Stung Sen Ramsar site in May.

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