Tiger Temple Thailand
The current population of Thailand is 62 million encompassing a majority of native Thai and a diversity of hilltribes such as Karen, Hmong, Akha, Lahu living mainly in the remote areas in the North and Northwest near the border with Myanmar and Laos. The entire Western Forest Complex is experiencing habitat fragmentation driven by human encroachments as forests are felled and cleared to make room for this growing human population.
Dr. Anak Pattanavibool, Director of WCS Thailand program, has worked closely with government researchers and resource managers from the Department of National Park and Wildlife (DNP) in order to install a long-term monitoring system of tigers and prey in HKK-TY using camera trapping and line transect techniques with encouragement and guidance from experienced WCS tiger scientists. WCS Thailand has DNP’s rangers and officers to combine monitoring and patrolling that use technology such as GPS and GIS database. We are working closely with researchers and conservationists from crucial local academic institutions and NGOs so as to improve their capacity to effectively run long-term science-based conservation, protection and awareness building programs. The WCS Living Landscape Program approach is also being utilized in order to cope with the critical problems threatening the wildlife in western Thailand. Earlier studies in Asia clearly show that tiger densities are positively and predictably correlated with prey densities. Therefore, knowledge of the responses of prey and tiger populations to management efforts are extremely important for both the future management of Huai Kha Khaeng and for conservation efforts elsewhere in Southeast Asia. The photographic capture-recapture sampling revealed that this method is a reasonable approach for estimating densities of tigers in other areas of Huai Kha Khaeng. Therefore, this could be applied in other protected parts of WEFCOM as well.
While continuing the above activities, WCS Thailand will engage in the following:
· To install camera-trapping systems for long-term tiger population monitoring and transect systems for prey monitoring in the best tiger habitat in HKK, so as to act as the benchmark for long-term tiger monitoring
in the best tiger populations in Thailand.
· To initiate the living landscape program approach in order to draft a conceptual model for conservation of HKK-TY and set up a monitoring system to measure the success of our interventions.
· To map tiger and prey distributions in KKNP through recce and line transect survey techniques.
· To setup and train park rangers and officials in HKK-TY and KKNP so as to integrate monitoring system into patrolling system and use the result of monitoring to guide protection.
· To support local and international NGOs regarding awareness building programs for tiger conservation based on WCS scientific findings on tiger status in Thailand.













April 17th, 2008 at 2:15 am
This is incredible!!!! Both that it actually exists, and that is so badly needed!
April 17th, 2008 at 3:13 am
This is the first comment and I would like to say that these animals’ habitats are more important than humanities thirst for more room. If you disagree then poo on you because I’ve never seen a tiger kill another tiger for personal gain. I use stumbleupon! and you should too. If you do, please give this site a thumbs up because I would hate to think of what might happen to these beautiful creatures if we don’t do SOMETHING.
Lee Sales
Harker Heights, TX