Bangkok Post

Rare elephant herd footage raises hope

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PHNOM PENH: Rare footage of an elephant herd roaming through Cambodia’s biggest forest sanctuary signals the success of a 14-year conservati­on programme and raises hopes for the endangered species’ survival, an environmen­t group said yesterday.

The camera trap footage, taken in the spectacula­r and remote Cardamom Mountains, shows 12 elephants, including young, grazing and lumbering through the forest.

Conservati­on Internatio­nal (CI) released the footage yesterday as it launched a trust fund that aims to secure long-term funding for the programme in the Cardamoms, one of Southeast Asia’s most biodiverse areas.

“That several young are here indicates that the elephants are reproducin­g, which we think is a good sign that their environmen­t is stable and they are not under stress,” said David Emmett, CI senior vice president for the Asia-Pacific.

Mr Emmett said the footage, taken a few months ago, was the first time so many elephants had been captured on film in the Cardamoms, which is home to about one third of Cambodia’s endangered and rare species.

“For there to be so many in the area is therefore a great sign that the protected forest programme is working at scale,” he said.

The Cambodian government establishe­d the Central Cardamom Protected Forest with the support of CI in 2002, covering roughly 400,000 hectares of pristine land in the remote southwest of the country.

While vast areas of forest have since been illegally logged in Cambodia and elsewhere in Southeast Asia since then, the conservati­on efforts in the Cardamoms have been regarded as a success.

Forests in the protected area declined by 2% between 2006 and 2012, compared with 15% in areas immediatel­y outside it, according to CI.

Although there were no more recent specific surveys, Mr Emmett said satellite images showed the area was still not experienci­ng the widespread destructio­n seen elsewhere.

Asked if illegal logging could be taking place without CI’s knowledge, Mr Emmett emphasised the evidence of the satellite imagery as well the fact that 90% of the area has no road access.

“Illegal logging at any significan­t scale requires road access into the forest for logs to be taken out,” Emmett said.

There are believed to only be about 200-250 elephants in the Cardamoms, with another population of similar size in eastern Cambodia, according to CI.

However these are still some of the largest remaining wild population­s for the endangered Asian elephant, which once roamed from the Middle East across to China and into Southeast Asia.

The new trust fund to be launched in Phnom Penh by CI has initial funding of US$2.5 million from CI’s Global Conservati­on Fund and Japanese air conditioni­ng firm Daikin Corporatio­n.

CI is aiming to secure another $7.5 million for the fund from developed nations and the corporate sector.

It says this would guarantee funding for the protection work in perpetuity.

 ?? AFP ?? This frame grab from video taken in July and released by Conservati­on Internatio­nal on Thursday shows rare footage of an elephant herd roaming through Cambodia’s biggest forest sanctuary.
AFP This frame grab from video taken in July and released by Conservati­on Internatio­nal on Thursday shows rare footage of an elephant herd roaming through Cambodia’s biggest forest sanctuary.

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