BT0010
Management of Royal Manas National Park

Forest guards on patrol in the Royal Manas NP
Copyright
© WWF Bhutan Program
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Project
Summary: Royal Manas National Park is one of the oldest and
richest among the protected areas of Bhutan. The project seeks
to protect this park through a wide range of interventions such
as the development and implementation of a sound park management
based on scientific management principles. Main components of
the project include conservation research, institutional and capacity
development and ecosystem protection. Within the project period
of five years, the project will establish a management system
supported by trained staff to carry out various activities. Rural
development form an important component in the project with the
aim of addressing farmers needs to enable sustainable use of natural
resources.
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BT0864
Linking Protected Areas
Project
Summary: Bhutan's existing protected areas system is a highly
comprehensive conservation strategy in that it includes representational
examples of the full range of the major ecosystems found in the
country. Encompassing more than one-fourth of the nations total
geographical area, the system consists of four national parks, four
wildlife sanctuaries and one strict nature reserve, These protected
areas are geographically very well located to protect a contiguous
altitudinal spectrum of ecosystems as well as to capture west-to-east
species variations across the country.
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BT0852:
Anti-Poaching Program
Project Summary: Bhutan's expansive forest cover and near-intact
natural environment shelter some 160 species of mammals, 770 species
of birds and 5,400 species of vascular plants. Many of these species
are threatened and appear in the IUCN Red Data Book. Poaching of
wild fauna and flora pose a serious conservation problem in Bhutan
considering the lucrative trade in parts and products of wild animals
and plants in the region. Based on field reports of incidents of
poaching, the Forestry Services Division embarked upon a program
to monitor and mitigate wildlife poaching and trade in Bhutan with
financial support from WWF.
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First
photographic evidence of the BengalTiger at 3000 meters taken
at ThrumshingLa National Park.
Bengal Tiger © Dr.Pralad Yonzon/Resources
Himalaya
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BT0863:
Conservation Management Planning for ThrumshingLa NP
Project
Summary: Transcending across the political boundaries of three
districts (dzongkhags), namely Bumthang, Lhuentshe and Mongar, ThrumshingLa
National Park occupies 768 km2 of mountain forest landscapes in
the central region of Bhutan. It was notified a national park in
1993 and gazetted in 1998. The project seeks to implement a series
of baseline surveys on the socio-economic situation of the resident
communities and the biological composition of the area and, subsequently,
develop a five-year conservation management plan based on the information
derived from these surveys.
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BT0856
Tiger Conservation Program
Project Summary:
Stringent wildlife legislation, pro-conservation development policy
and environmentally compassionate Buddhist ethics, have kept the
tiger population in Bhutan relatively stable. However, given the
lucrative trade in tiger poaching for its parts and products used
in oriental medicines and fragmentation of habitats due to developmental
activities, the threat to tiger survival is never completely eradicated.
Although several ongoing conservation programs were indirectly connected
to tiger conservation, no tiger-specific conservation initiatives
were in place until 1995. The tiger conservation program in Bhutan
was jointly launched in late 1995 by WWF Bhutan PO and the Royal
Government's Forestry Services Division to carry out tiger status
surveys and information-building, public education, professional
capacity building for tiger conservation.
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