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Uneasy alliance to save crocs

2008-10-30 19:08
line
<b>Crocodiles sit in and on the edge of water at the Samut Prakan Crocodile Farm and Zoo on the outskirts of Bangkok. (Paul Dailing, AFP)</b>

Crocodiles sit in and on the edge of water at the Samut Prakan Crocodile Farm and Zoo on the outskirts of Bangkok. (Paul Dailing, AFP)

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Bangkok - As deforestation and a loss of natural prey threatens Siamese crocodiles with extinction, the farms that once helped endanger the species are now helping save it, conservationists say.

There are fewer than 50 Siamese crocodiles left in the wild in Thailand and about 200 in the entire Mekong river region, but thousands live on commercial farms designed to transform them into belts, shoes and handbags, or meat for export.

"(People) hunt the young to sell to the crocodile farms. For the big ones, they hunt for the skin, the hide," says Chavalit Vidthayanon, a freshwater specialist with conservation group WWF.

"Crocodile farming may induce hunting also," Chavalit says. "That is a negative side. But on the positive side it means the crocodile farm can retain the genetics of the crocodile for a longer time."

Thailand's crocodile farming has over the past six years expanded into a booming multi-billion-dollar industry, with tens of thousands of crocodile skins and live crocodiles, as well as the reptile's meat, sold worldwide each year.

Much of the skins end up as handbags, wallets or shoes on chic consumers in Asia and the West.

The dark green, three-metre long Siamese crocodile begins life at one of the dozens of farms along the Mekong river.

Poaching and smuggling

The conservation group Fauna and Flora International says the farms are to blame for the extinction of the Siamese species from 99% of its natural habitat.

But now the industry is helping preserve the rare reptile and deter smuggling, says Wuthiphong Thaolar, a Thai customs inspector and member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations' Wildlife Enforcement Network.

There are 22 farms in Thailand that are legal and approved under the Cites global treaty on trade in endangered animals.

This makes smuggling wild crocodiles into Thailand from neighbouring countries such as Cambodia a less attractive proposition, says Wuthiphong.

Poaching of wild Siamese crocodiles appears to be more of a problem in Cambodia, where Fauna and Flora International say there are thousands of unregulated, illegal farms, and just a handful of legal ones.

Cambodian farmers will almost $2 000 for a mature wild female, the group says, which represents around half a year's income for many Cambodians.

Efforts to re-introduce the animal to the wild in the region have been "quite far from successful", says WWF's Chavalit.

Water pollution has killed the fish the young Siamese crocodiles eat in the wild, while deforestation and hunting have reduced populations of monkeys and deer that the mature reptiles favour.

Many farms are inter-breeding the Siamese crocodile with the saltwater crocodile for a higher-quality hide and superior growth rate, but this makes the animals useless for re-introduction to the wild, conservation groups say.

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marius.dumas says... Here on Wikipedia we can see the relationship between solar cycles and temperature. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_variation The problem I see is that global warming is a multidiscipline issue and not only a issue for climatologists. It’s an issue that requires the studies of astronomers, biologists, physicists ext. Only relying on the input of climatologist who feed the media is a mistake. National geographic reports on finding that both Mars and the Earth shows signs of warming. Where do we need more evidence to suggest the main force behind global warming is the sun, since both planets are experiencing simultaneous warming. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/02/070228-mars-warming.html I feel that there is enough arguments for a theory against manmade global warming to consider resistance to the manmade warming theory as reasonable. The only fact is on this issue, that global warming and climate change are only hypothesis, theories, there is no solid evidence on the existing theory to call it a fact. Read the article...

 
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