Showing posts with label National Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Park. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The wetlands of U Minh Thuong National Park

Wetland cajuput forests in U Minh Thuong Forest in the Mekong Delta province of Kien Giang. Boat tours can take you through the huge park in the wet season - Photo: Dang Hoang Tham
U Minh Thuong (Upper U Minh) in the Mekong Delta’s Kien Giang Province is a vast wetlands area rich in fish and waterbird life that was declared a National Park in September 2000.

To get there by road, from Tac Cau in the province travel 30 kilometers then turn towards Vinh Thuan District for 30 kilometers. This will bring you to the border of U Minh Thuong. The path lies under a dense green canopy. The forest which spans An Bien, Vinh Thuan and An Minh districts of Kien Giang Province is about halfway between Can Tho and Ca Mau.

U Minh Thuong covers 21,100 hectares. The core 8,000 hectares are strictly protected, while locals live in the remaining 13,000ha growing rice and fruit and vegetables and  exploiting government owned cajuput forests.

The national park is one of only a few protected tropical mangrove forests left in the world. It contains 252 species of flora, 202 different insect species, 24 animal species and 185 kinds of birds, many of which are rare, some have been listed in the red book.

There is also a 44-hectare bird sanctuary with more than 70,000 birds.

The forest that has been through two revolutions as a military base is now being developed for research, to improve conservation efforts of endangered species as well as for eco-tourism and traditional tours.

Roads to U Minh are much better than before. Boat tours of Hoa Mai Lake in the center of the area, cost VND20,000 per person during the rainy season. In the dry season, travelers can hike around the park.

The U Minh Restaurant serves local specialties that include a range of fish dishes and honey dishes such as  honey sweet soup, honey salads, and honey sashimi.

The sunsets there are fantastic as thousands of birds return from feeding grounds to their nests. The forest is full of wildlife and the sounds of monkeys and wild pigs can often be heard.

Guests can stay overnight at the forest but should be careful so that monkeys or pigs don’t steal your food.

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Monday, November 22, 2010

Int’l recognition sought for Vietnam's largest lake

Int’l recognition sought for Vietnam's largest lake
Vietnam will apply for the inscription of the Ba Be National Park on the Ramsar List of Westlands of International Importance, the government said Saturday.


A report on the government's website said the Ministry of Natural Resources will apply for the inscription in accordance with the Ramsar Convention – an international treaty for the conservation and sustainable utilization of wetlands.


The Ba Be National Park in the northern province of Bac Kan was established in 1992, with the 500-hectare Ba Be Lake at its center. The park is home to 299 animal species and 417 plant species.


In 1995, the lake was named one of 20 in the world that needed  to be protected at a global lake convention in the US. The lake is also one of the Heritage Parks of the regional bloc ASEAN, the government’s report said.


The Ramsar Convention came into force in 1975. There are now 160 contracting parties, with Vietnam joining in 1989. The Ramsar List includes 1,904  sites, known as Ramsar Sites, with a total surface of more than 186.5 million hectares.

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Disquiet on a tranquil front



Amidst serene beauty, a national park is losing its treasures




Taking flight: White storks at the Xuan Thuy National Park in Nam Dinh Province, 150 kilometers southwest of Hanoi. Many flora and fauna species at the park are said to be on the verge of extinction.


Squawk


The tranquility of a world at repose is broken as fresh white wings soar from the moorland with a flash of sunshine on the silvery feathers, leathery oval leaves falling in their wake from the River Mangrove trees.


The gulls are early risers.


A new day begins at the Xuan Thuy National Park, recognized by the Ramsar Convention as a wetland of international importance. The Ramsar Convention, which is named after the eponymous town in Iran, is an international treaty for the conservation and sustainable utilization of wetlands.


It is located in Giao Thuy District of Nam Dinh Province, 150 kilometers to the southwest of Hanoi, where thousands of flora and fauna species have been recorded and many are on the threshold of extinction.


At the Red River estuary, the sun was emerging, pink and fresh, embroidering the region with golden light.


The tide had receded; the silt-laden river was contracting itself into a reddish-brown water dragon making its way to the Pacific Ocean.


On the narrow footpath, half-asleep beach morning glories were shaking crystal dewdrops off their shiny heart-shaped leaves and unfolding the first umbrella-shaped purple flowers to welcome butterflies.


In the moss rose patches, red blossoms were also starting to open like little flames.


Nearby the rattle pod trees kept swinging their golden flowers as if to dance with the breeze and tease the bees.


A horde of dragonflies hawked over and landed on the touch-me-nots, making the sensitive plants fold their leaves inward and go back to sleep.


A breeze brought in the fresh, salty smell of the sea. From somewhere in the mangrove forest came shivering, squeaky tweets as if some hungry chick was crying for its mother to come back and feed it.


The Xuan Thuy National Park is, officially, a 7,000-ha mangrove-covered area providing a habitat and migratory platform to more than 200 species of birds, including endangered and rare species such as the black-faced spoon-bill, Saunders' Gull, the spotted greenshank, the spoon-billed sandpiper and the Asian dowitcher.


Four or five white storks flew by; their large wings almost touching the observatory tower. The waders perched on a mangrove apple tree, preening themselves in silence.


A flock of passerines landed on the sandy flat, cheeping noisily as they walked along the waters edge with their long yellow tails moving up and down continuously. Their little round eyes were black beans fixed on the waters edge looking for any tasty tidbits which the waves might bring along.


Millions of colorful spots ran back and forth on the mudflat. Fiddler crabs of all kinds came out of their havens to feast on the sunlight and the breeze. The males waved their oversized claws crazily as a female approached cautiously.


Down in the rivulets, mullets nibbled at the surface, drawing hundreds of circles on the water while mudskippers scurried up and down the river mangrove seedlings.


Officials from Xuan Thuy National Park said there are over 100 species of fish in the preserved area.


From the furrows underground, sand ghost shrimps contributed to the animation.


Further toward the islets, shanties on stilts over the oyster farms looked like water striders on the mudflat.


Silhouettes against the horizon, fishermen, submerged to the neck, put out their nets in the cold water. Their footprints made intersected trails on the alluvium like a piece of fine art work to be completely erased when the tide came in.


Though a preserved area, the park embraces private aquaculture farms, and, therefore, it is actually open to everyone.


Out of nowhere an emaciated woman emerged; covered from head to toe in mud. She had two different bags for two different kinds of snails on her sides; another bag for crabs in one hand, and yet another bag for sea cucumbers in the other.


She spread the catch on the path for re-sorting. Fifteen years ago, when she first walked on the wetland and stepped on huge dungeness crabs, no one picked anything tiny, she said. She walked down to the moorland, getting handfuls of mud and mixing it with the little snails so that they would be heavier. She was going to sell them by the kilogram.


Water gushed from a shrimp pond to the sea through a culvert to the rivulet, rocking the wooden boats anchored nearby, where old clothes fluttered in the salt-laden breeze. Those little boats were home to households; where members cohabited from cradle to grave. Babies were conceived and born, lulled to sleep and nurtured to maturity with the rocking of waves.


The Red River Estuary was home to several floating villages. Yet, over time, natural resources became scarcer and life harder; the fisher-folk had to leave for somewhere else, and some left the sea for good as they looked for other ways to survive.


Experts have conducted conference after conference to discuss the serious impact of global climate change on this wetland of international importance; about how the casuarinas have died out, how the mangrove seedlings could not survive the rising sea level.


Talking to the media earlier this year, the director of Xuan Thuy National Park, Nguyen Viet Cach, said the number of birds observed there had decreased by about 10 percent compared with the same period the previous year.


In May this year a man was arrested and asked to pay VND2 million (US$100) for illegally capturing 19 waders. So far, this has been the only such case. At gatherings, many local men still brag about how many gulls or storks they had shot the previous day this migration season.


There are no recent statistics on underwater species. Yet it is not unusual to see farms encroaching on the natural habitats of aquatic and semi-aquatic species and/or fishermen fishing with electric devices or even mines.


Authorities have been complaining about “the shortage of resources.” At the headquarters of the park, more and more large “functional centers” are rising around the main multi-storied office building.


On a regular day, the complex was completely empty, except for the construction workers. On the weed-covered yard, dogs lay sullen, too bored to even bother to bark at intruders. The Museum of Xuan Thuy National Park was closed. There was a canoe with the logo of the park on it, perhaps meant to take visitors offshore or maybe for patrol.


Now, it rested and rusted on a trailer with flat tires.


Across the Red River, the wetlands in neighboring Thai Binh Province, once luxuriant with mangroves, is a wasteland of bare shrimp ponds.


Dusk falls gently on the mangroves, as their dark shadows crawl everywhere. More and more boats come back from the sea to take shelter at the estuary during the night. An industrious fisherman hits his bamboo oars against the metal boat to drive fish into his net for the last time before heading home to nearby Giao Thien Village.


In the eastern horizon the moon rises, pure and full like a crystal gem, striking a calm pose in the immense chill of the autumnal maritime night.


From the mangroves, owls hoot; the sobbing whoo whoo renders things more desolate and ghostly.


A lonely night heron leaves its nest, flapping its wings to fly into the silvery night.


Lingering sweet scents of seaside clerodendron flowers and of other hyacinths fills the air.


Officially, the Xuan Thuy National Park houses about 700 species of flora and 400 fauna.


How many of these actually remain?

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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Song of the gibbons

Tourists catch a boat from the national park headquarters to visit the primate rescue center
If the wind is blowing from the right direction you can hear the gibbon’s song from your bungalow at Cat Tien National Park about five hours drive from HCMC. The sound comes from an island in the Dong Nai river not more than a kilometer from the park headquarters and accommodation.

One of the juvenile gibbons at the center - Photos: Mong BInh and Wendy Derham
On the island there is the Dao Tien Endangered Primate Rescue Center that specializes in rehabilitating golden cheek gibbons for release into the wild. The gibbons there sing all day long – it is a strange haunting song whose high pitch is more like a drawn out note from a keyboard synthesizer than a primate’s voice. The sound takes a little getting used to as it is quite loud.

Gibbons that live in the wild at Cat Tien National Park sing songs that declare their territory or let other gibbons know that that they are looking for a mate. The songs are normally sung in the morning and they reverberate around the jungle for miles. But at the center the gibbons sing all day long – perhaps because they are in such close quarters.

The primates are there mostly because they have been rescued or confiscated by rangers from poachers or households or petrol stations that kept them as pets or mascots. Sometimes because of the growing awareness of wildlife conservation in Vietnam households surrender them voluntarily and they wind up in the rescue center that was set up by Monkey World - Ape Rescue Centre in 2008.

To visit the center just talk to the rangers at the park headquarters and they will arrange a boat to take you across to the island. From where the boat drops you off there is about a 15 minute walk to the center – so remember to take some water. It is not really set up for tours but it’s worth visiting for an hour or two to see these beautiful but endangered primates. Some of the rangers don’t speak English well so if you want to find out more about the gibbons, one of the Western staff there may be able to help you.

If you are hoping to get to cuddle one of the cute gibbons, you will be very disappointed. The center is very strict about human contact, not even the staff are allowed to touch them. You are not even allowed to walk up to their big cages, which are set well about 20m off the path. To prepare them for the wild the gibbons are exposed to a minimum of human contact. Do you will have to be satisfied with seeing them from a distance.

Visitors must walk on the path between the large cages. There’s six or seven big cages and a special nursery for the juvenile gibbons and with a fenced off tree area so they can learn the physics of swinging through the jungle.

The island also has a semi wild area where gibbons are let go prior to being totally released into the national park. The semi wild area is bordered by the river and a special fence that the center built this year.

Monkey world set up the Endangered Asian Species Trust (E.A.S.T.) to help continue this conservation work in to the future so if you want to support the work they are doing, including rehabilitation, research and awareness raising at schools, then donate at the office or buy a T-shirt or hat.

Related Articles

Song of the gibbons

Tourists catch a boat from the national park headquarters to visit the primate rescue center
If the wind is blowing from the right direction you can hear the gibbon’s song from your bungalow at Cat Tien National Park about five hours drive from HCMC. The sound comes from an island in the Dong Nai river not more than a kilometer from the park headquarters and accommodation.

One of the juvenile gibbons at the center - Photos: Mong BInh and Wendy Derham
On the island there is the Dao Tien Endangered Primate Rescue Center that specializes in rehabilitating golden cheek gibbons for release into the wild. The gibbons there sing all day long – it is a strange haunting song whose high pitch is more like a drawn out note from a keyboard synthesizer than a primate’s voice. The sound takes a little getting used to as it is quite loud.

Gibbons that live in the wild at Cat Tien National Park sing songs that declare their territory or let other gibbons know that that they are looking for a mate. The songs are normally sung in the morning and they reverberate around the jungle for miles. But at the center the gibbons sing all day long – perhaps because they are in such close quarters.

The primates are there mostly because they have been rescued or confiscated by rangers from poachers or households or petrol stations that kept them as pets or mascots. Sometimes because of the growing awareness of wildlife conservation in Vietnam households surrender them voluntarily and they wind up in the rescue center that was set up by Monkey World - Ape Rescue Centre in 2008.

To visit the center just talk to the rangers at the park headquarters and they will arrange a boat to take you across to the island. From where the boat drops you off there is about a 15 minute walk to the center – so remember to take some water. It is not really set up for tours but it’s worth visiting for an hour or two to see these beautiful but endangered primates. Some of the rangers don’t speak English well so if you want to find out more about the gibbons, one of the Western staff there may be able to help you.

If you are hoping to get to cuddle one of the cute gibbons, you will be very disappointed. The center is very strict about human contact, not even the staff are allowed to touch them. You are not even allowed to walk up to their big cages, which are set well about 20m off the path. To prepare them for the wild the gibbons are exposed to a minimum of human contact. Do you will have to be satisfied with seeing them from a distance.

Visitors must walk on the path between the large cages. There’s six or seven big cages and a special nursery for the juvenile gibbons and with a fenced off tree area so they can learn the physics of swinging through the jungle.

The island also has a semi wild area where gibbons are let go prior to being totally released into the national park. The semi wild area is bordered by the river and a special fence that the center built this year.

Monkey world set up the Endangered Asian Species Trust (E.A.S.T.) to help continue this conservation work in to the future so if you want to support the work they are doing, including rehabilitation, research and awareness raising at schools, then donate at the office or buy a T-shirt or hat.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Song of the gibbons

Tourists catch a boat from the national park headquarters to visit the primate rescue center
If the wind is blowing from the right direction you can hear the gibbon’s song from your bungalow at Cat Tien National Park about five hours drive from HCMC. The sound comes from an island in the Dong Nai river not more than a kilometer from the park headquarters and accommodation.

One of the juvenile gibbons at the center - Photos: Mong BInh and Wendy Derham
On the island there is the Dao Tien Endangered Primate Rescue Center that specializes in rehabilitating golden cheek gibbons for release into the wild. The gibbons there sing all day long – it is a strange haunting song whose high pitch is more like a drawn out note from a keyboard synthesizer than a primate’s voice. The sound takes a little getting used to as it is quite loud.

Gibbons that live in the wild at Cat Tien National Park sing songs that declare their territory or let other gibbons know that that they are looking for a mate. The songs are normally sung in the morning and they reverberate around the jungle for miles. But at the center the gibbons sing all day long – perhaps because they are in such close quarters.

The primates are there mostly because they have been rescued or confiscated by rangers from poachers or households or petrol stations that kept them as pets or mascots. Sometimes because of the growing awareness of wildlife conservation in Vietnam households surrender them voluntarily and they wind up in the rescue center that was set up by Monkey World - Ape Rescue Centre in 2008.

To visit the center just talk to the rangers at the park headquarters and they will arrange a boat to take you across to the island. From where the boat drops you off there is about a 15 minute walk to the center – so remember to take some water. It is not really set up for tours but it’s worth visiting for an hour or two to see these beautiful but endangered primates. Some of the rangers don’t speak English well so if you want to find out more about the gibbons, one of the Western staff there may be able to help you.

If you are hoping to get to cuddle one of the cute gibbons, you will be very disappointed. The center is very strict about human contact, not even the staff are allowed to touch them. You are not even allowed to walk up to their big cages, which are set well about 20m off the path. To prepare them for the wild the gibbons are exposed to a minimum of human contact. Do you will have to be satisfied with seeing them from a distance.

Visitors must walk on the path between the large cages. There’s six or seven big cages and a special nursery for the juvenile gibbons and with a fenced off tree area so they can learn the physics of swinging through the jungle.

The island also has a semi wild area where gibbons are let go prior to being totally released into the national park. The semi wild area is bordered by the river and a special fence that the center built this year.

Monkey world set up the Endangered Asian Species Trust (E.A.S.T.) to help continue this conservation work in to the future so if you want to support the work they are doing, including rehabilitation, research and awareness raising at schools, then donate at the office or buy a T-shirt or hat.

Related Articles

Song of the gibbons

Tourists catch a boat from the national park headquarters to visit the primate rescue center
If the wind is blowing from the right direction you can hear the gibbon’s song from your bungalow at Cat Tien National Park about five hours drive from HCMC. The sound comes from an island in the Dong Nai river not more than a kilometer from the park headquarters and accommodation.

One of the juvenile gibbons at the center - Photos: Mong BInh and Wendy Derham
On the island there is the Dao Tien Endangered Primate Rescue Center that specializes in rehabilitating golden cheek gibbons for release into the wild. The gibbons there sing all day long – it is a strange haunting song whose high pitch is more like a drawn out note from a keyboard synthesizer than a primate’s voice. The sound takes a little getting used to as it is quite loud.

Gibbons that live in the wild at Cat Tien National Park sing songs that declare their territory or let other gibbons know that that they are looking for a mate. The songs are normally sung in the morning and they reverberate around the jungle for miles. But at the center the gibbons sing all day long – perhaps because they are in such close quarters.

The primates are there mostly because they have been rescued or confiscated by rangers from poachers or households or petrol stations that kept them as pets or mascots. Sometimes because of the growing awareness of wildlife conservation in Vietnam households surrender them voluntarily and they wind up in the rescue center that was set up by Monkey World - Ape Rescue Centre in 2008.

To visit the center just talk to the rangers at the park headquarters and they will arrange a boat to take you across to the island. From where the boat drops you off there is about a 15 minute walk to the center – so remember to take some water. It is not really set up for tours but it’s worth visiting for an hour or two to see these beautiful but endangered primates. Some of the rangers don’t speak English well so if you want to find out more about the gibbons, one of the Western staff there may be able to help you.

If you are hoping to get to cuddle one of the cute gibbons, you will be very disappointed. The center is very strict about human contact, not even the staff are allowed to touch them. You are not even allowed to walk up to their big cages, which are set well about 20m off the path. To prepare them for the wild the gibbons are exposed to a minimum of human contact. Do you will have to be satisfied with seeing them from a distance.

Visitors must walk on the path between the large cages. There’s six or seven big cages and a special nursery for the juvenile gibbons and with a fenced off tree area so they can learn the physics of swinging through the jungle.

The island also has a semi wild area where gibbons are let go prior to being totally released into the national park. The semi wild area is bordered by the river and a special fence that the center built this year.

Monkey world set up the Endangered Asian Species Trust (E.A.S.T.) to help continue this conservation work in to the future so if you want to support the work they are doing, including rehabilitation, research and awareness raising at schools, then donate at the office or buy a T-shirt or hat.

Related Articles