Dong Thap’s ambitious plan to rescue red-crowned beauties.
ANN/VIET NAM NEWS – In the past few years, fewer and fewer red-crowned cranes have been coming to Tram Chim National Park in Dong Thap, a place in the Mekong Delta. When they came back in 2021, only three of them were seen.
This park is well-known for being a home to big red-crowned cranes from East Asia, which are very rare around the world. These cranes are in danger, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
The birds usually arrive from neighbouring Cambodia in December and stay until May, when it is the dry season in southern Vietnam.
However, their numbers have fallen in both countries over the past decade, from 850 in 2010 to below 160 last year. Notably, none perched at the Tram Chim National Park last year and in 2020.
“The contraction reveals that the bird is teetering on the brink of extinction in the Mekong Delta and Vietnam in general,” said Nguyen Hoai Bao, a lecturer at the Vietnam National University-HCM City.
He blamed habitat deterioration and environmental pollution induced by agricultural production for the issue, stressing that their absence also demonstrates wetland habitat degradation and biodiversity loss.
Given this, Dong Thap has rolled out a project aiming to revive the flocks of the bird at the Tram Chim National Park, and restore the wetland habitat for many other species.
The project is a joint effort by the provincial People’s Committee, the Vietnam Zoos Association, the International Crane Foundation, and the Zoological Park Organisation of Thailand, which has been successful in the work.
Accordingly, the Dong Thap People’s Committee will manage and finance the crane recovery programme at the Tràm Chim National Park, the International Crane Foundation and the Vietnam Zoos Association will provide consultation services and offer training courses to crane keepers, and the Zoological Park Organisation of Thailand will provide the Tram Chim National Park with red-crowned chicks each year, apart from training employees at the park to take care of cranes and recover the habitat of the red-crowned cranes.
According to Nguyen Hoang Minh Hai, the park’s head of the research and international cooperation division, the VND92 billion (USD3.87 million) project is expected to raise and release 150 cranes into the wild between 2023 and 2033, with a minimum survival rate of 100.
Bao also stressed the need for competent agencies to restore the original wetland habitat and the agricultural ecosystem to ensure livelihoods for local residents as part of the effort to conserve the endangered species.