Bangkok Post

RARE CROCODILE EGGS HATCH AT CAMBODIAN CONSERVATI­ON CENTRE

New hope for endangered species with a global population of about 410, while the Irrawaddy dolphin’s decline could be reversed

- By Sopheng Cheang

Nine eggs of an endangered crocodile species found in the wild in June and taken to a conservati­on centre in southern Cambodia have hatched, conservati­onists have announced. The New York-based Wildlife Conservati­on Society and Cambodia’s Fisheries Administra­tion said the eggs of nine Siamese crocodiles have hatched at the Koh Kong Reptile Conservati­on Center after being retrieved from the wild to protect them from poachers and predators.

The WCS says the crocodile, with an estimated global population of around 410, is found only in Cambodia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam, with the greatest number in Cambodia. The species is listed as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature because its numbers are rapidly shrinking.

The June discovery of 19 eggs was the first Siamese crocodile nest recorded in six years of research and protection in Koh Kong’s Sre Ambel area.

The conservati­on centre was establishe­d by the two organisati­ons to safeguard endangered reptiles such as Siamese crocodiles and Royal turtles.

“We will take care of these hatchlings until they are able to survive in nature on their own,” the groups’ joint announceme­nt quoted Som Sitha, WCS’s technical adviser for the Sre Ambel Conservati­on Project, as saying. “We will then release some to the wild, and others will be kept for breeding.”

His colleague Tun Sarorn, caretaker of Royal turtles and Siamese crocodiles at the centre, expressed her excitement over the hatchlings.

“I am so excited to see these hatchlings. It is the first time I have taken care of them since arriving at the centre,” she said. “Before seeing them, I was surprised to hear their voices from inside the eggs. It was amazing, and I felt so happy because I realised they are coming out.”

A different conservati­on group, WWF-Cambodia, separately announced encouragin­g news about another endangered species, the Irrawaddy, or Mekong, dolphin, which has a worldwide population of about 7,000, 90% of that in Bangladesh. In Cambodia and Laos, there are an estimated 80 adults in the Mekong River.

WWF-Cambodia announced that from January until this week it recorded two dolphin deaths and eight births, an improvemen­t over the same period last year when there were four deaths and four births.

“More than ever, there is hope to believe it is possible to reverse the trend of the Irrawaddy dolphin decline,” the group said.

 ??  ?? TIME FOR A NAP: Siamese baby crocodiles rest at the Koh Kong Reptile Conservati­on Center in Cambodia. The species is listed as critically endangered.
TIME FOR A NAP: Siamese baby crocodiles rest at the Koh Kong Reptile Conservati­on Center in Cambodia. The species is listed as critically endangered.
 ??  ?? FRESH HOPE: WWF-Cambodia announced that more Irrawaddy dolphins have been born in the country this year.
FRESH HOPE: WWF-Cambodia announced that more Irrawaddy dolphins have been born in the country this year.
 ??  ?? TAKING A DIP: Siamese baby crocodiles swim in a bin at the Koh Kong Reptile Conservati­on Center. Most of the 400 or so Siamese crocodiles in the world live in Cambodia.
TAKING A DIP: Siamese baby crocodiles swim in a bin at the Koh Kong Reptile Conservati­on Center. Most of the 400 or so Siamese crocodiles in the world live in Cambodia.

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