The Pak Banker

‘Land of Cats’ a biodiversi­ty powerhouse – for now

- LEE POSTON

Just last month leopards were declared extinct in Laos. They have disappeare­d from Vietnam and are likely to go extinct in Cambodia. Tigers also have vanished from Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos. Other cat species are not faring much better, falling victim to poachers’ snares and developers’ roads, often ending up in illegal wildlife trade markets in the notorious Golden Triangle where Laos, Thailand and Myanmar meet.

However, within the Greater Mekong Region, there is one area that is something of a haven for cat species – a landscape the size of Cambodia straddling Thailand and Myanmar with a name that is something of a mouthful – Dawna Tenasserim. Here in the mountains and jungles of a not widely known landscape, one-fifth of the world’s cat species are hanging on while the world outside (and inside at times) does everything it can to ensure their demise.

Some of the stars of this show are familiar, such as tigers and leopards, celebrated far and wide in poetry, literature and Disney films. The others are not so well known, such as Asiatic golden cats, marbled cats, clouded leopards, jungle cats and leopard cats. That’s seven of the 36 known cat species. And it’s quite possible that the highly elusive fishing cat lives in this landscape, bringing the number to eight.

These cats are profiled in a new report, “Dawna Tenasserim: The Land of Cats.” It shines a light on a part of the world that is still 82% forested – which alone is eye-popping. Vast areas of wilderness in Southeast Asia are becoming a thing of the past as developmen­t opens up previously inaccessib­le forests, allowing easy access for poachers. But in the Dawna Tenasserim, there is still hope. It’s not rocket science. Large, unbroken high-quality tropical forests with low poaching pressure and good management lead to very high biodiversi­ty. What cats most need is plenty of prey, lots of space and to be left alone. If all this happens they’ll breed like, well, cats.

The tigers have certainly been trying their best. The Dawna Tenasserim has 180-220 tigers and a recent Myanmar census of just 8% of the country’s tiger habitat showed at least 22 individual­s. Cubs are caught on camera trap every year in Thailand and late last year, video of a well-known male tiger feasting on a huge gaur brought renewed hope of the resiliency of tigers in Thailand. Also in Thailand, a tiger was recorded in Kui Buri National Park for the first time in seven years. Leopards have a stronghold in the northern part of the landscape and the jungle cat, once thought extinct in the Dawna Tenasserim, re-emerged on camera in 2017.

These are all good signs. As the report highlights, threats such as conversion of land for corn, rubber, cassava, oil palm and betel nut are on the increase. Land conversion and constructi­on of roads accelerate the poaching threat by providing easier access to endangered species. Cheap, home-made snares can kill or maim any creature that comes along.

Another looming threat is the proposed Dawei-Htee Khee Road that will connect a deep-sea port and special economic zone in Dawei, Myanmar, with Thailand and the rest of Southeast Asia. If built, it will bisect the north/south migration routes for elephants and tigers. Recent wildlife surveys along the proposed route highlight the fact that numerous wildlife species – many endangered – exist within close proximity of the route.

So what to do? A good start would be increased funding to protect critical areas for cat population­s, along with new surveys and research on prey abundance and habitat needs. Government­s and developers also need to work with scientists to map, identify and protect wildlife corridors, both within each country and between them.

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