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2007 - a completely new exciting programme of activities and protection and we need you to help us continue to make it the most successful Tiger Protection Programme as it has been for the past 10 years, With the most experienced Tiger Protection and Education team in Indonesia.
”Together…! Save the Sumatran Tiger” |
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Way Kambas National ParkWay Kambas National is situated on the coast of Lampung province on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. Bounded by the Java Sea to the east, and to the southeast and west by rivers the park is almost entirely flat (elevation between 0-60 metres a.s.l.). As such the park is characteristic of the coastal lowland plains of eastern Sumatra. Approximately 1,300 km2 in extent, the park was originally established as a wildlife reserve in 1937, but between 1954 and 1974 was intensively logged. In 1978 it was proposed as a national park, with provisional declaration in 1989 and final declaration in 1997.
HabitatMuch of the park is dominated by a mosaic of Imperata cylindrica grassland and secondary forest habitat types, primarily a result of intensive logging operations in the past, but maintained by frequent fires and seasonal flooding. A central core area of the park is characterised by relatively intact primary tropical rainforest.
BiodiversityRemote camera monitoring, carried out by the Sumatran Tiger Project and the Indonesian Department of Forestry between 1995 and 1999, has shown that the park's mammal biodiversity remains intact. Camera work suggests that between 21 and 36 tigers existed in the park during this period.
Way Kambas is also rich in other herbivores such as
As a model for tiger conservationWay Kambas National Park is considered an excellent model in which to develop tiger conservation plans across Sumatra. While the mosaic of lowland secondary rainforest and Imperata grassland is quite different to the hilly and forested of the larger Sumatran national parks, the habitat types found in Way Kambas can be considered to be more representative of Sumatra as a whole. Intensively logged on several occasions in the past, the park has been subject to varying degrees of disturbance and, because of this, is currently at different stages of regeneration. Also, the high density of humans in the area surrounding the park is itself a characteristic of the majority of other protected areas in Sumatra where tigers are thought to exist.
| 20 August 2007 World's first for tiger conservation Translocated conflict tiger fitted with GPS collar - FIRST! MORE 18.07.07 2 Tigers caught by new cameras in wknp .. just 2 days after installing new cameras (supplied by STT) in Way Kambas 2 new tigers have been captured on film.... MORE 06.06.07 New tiger photos just in captured on remote camera MORE
06.06.07 Second school opens - funded by STT MORE 01.06.07 Motorbikes funded by STT in use in the field MORE 23.05.07 Annual Report Way Kambas NP...MORE 08.05.07 Teams receive New essential equipment-motorbikes funded by STT Pics 08.05.07... workshop for the local communities... MORE 30.04.07 Annual report Bukit Tigapuluh NP Revealing the Mystery of Bukit Tigapuluh NP MORE Senepis- Latest 16/4/07 Government create corridor to Dumai causing major problems in Senepis...MORE 7/4/07 Protecting the tiger faced mushroom - rare rafflesia monitoring... MORE A Week On Patrol In Bukit Duabelas National Park... More Senepis
- Latest news including: Poacher
caught
and animals released back to the wild MORE New wild tigers caught on remote cameras to name..MORE Nov 2006 Drought Crisis in Way Kambas NP more Datai village - Latest news and pics... including first ever letter from village child taught to read and write by the teacher funded by STT...More Senepis Tiger Conservation Area – 106,000 hectares approved by Minister of Forestry more View world exclusive pictures of a wild Flat Headed Cat - click here Go on a virtual anti-poaching patrol with rangers in Sumatra - click here |
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Last updated: August 21, 2007 | Contact and Site Information | Press CTRL-D to add us to your favorites now
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