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Excavation for 20 ponds in Stung Treng wildlife sanctuary finished: Birdlife

BIRDLIFE International Cambodia Programme has completed digging 20 ponds in the Siem Pang Wildlife Sanctuary in Stung Treng province’s Siem Pang district to improve water resources and habitat for wildlife and livestock and increase food resources for residents and fauna.

National Database Specialist - Fisheries, Phnom Penh, Cambodia - FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

Post Number : N/A IMPORTANT NOTICE: Please note that Closure Date and Time displayed above are based on date and time settings of your personal device FAO seeks gender, geographical and linguistic diversity in order to best serve FAO Members in all regions. Qualified female applicants are encouraged to apply. People with disabilities are equally encouraged to apply. All applications will be treated with the strictest confidentiality. Organizational Setting The main aim of the FAO country offices, which are headed by an FAO Representative, is to assist governments to develop policies, programmes and projects to achieve food security and to reduce hunger and malnutrition, to develop the agricultural, fisheries and forestry sectors, and to use their environmental and natural resources in a sustainable manner.

Second chance for Cambodia s big birds

div class bg partners and news /div Like most websites we use cookies. If you’re happy with that, just carry on as normal (close this bar) - otherwise click here to find out more. 5 Jan 2021 Second chance for Cambodia’s big birds For a suspenseful three years, Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary seemed doomed. But now, changed policies, changed hearts and a new organic rice scheme promises hope for the forest landscape’s villagers, businesses and giant birds. The Sarus Crane can reach six feet tall © Jonathan Eames By Cressida Stevens “What’s happening to my home?” If birds think rationally (and there’s evidence to suggest they can) then this thought may have been in the heads of a family of Sarus Cranes as they stood, powerless, watching monster machinery tear up their habitat. Sovannarith Thol was at the scene a few years ago: “Many people know that habitat loss is the biggest cause of extinction, but they are distanced from the reality,” says

Second chance for Cambodia s big birds

Like most websites we use cookies. If you’re happy with that, just carry on as normal (close this bar) - otherwise click here to find out more. 5 Jan 2021 Second chance for Cambodia’s big birds For a suspenseful three years, Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary seemed doomed. But now, changed policies, changed hearts and a new organic rice scheme promises hope for the forest landscape’s villagers, businesses and giant birds. The Sarus Crane can reach six feet tall © Jonathan Eames By Cressida Stevens “What’s happening to my home?” If birds think rationally (and there’s evidence to suggest they can) then this thought may have been in the heads of a family of Sarus Cranes as they stood, powerless, watching monster machinery tear up their habitat. Sovannarith Thol was at the scene a few years ago: “Many people know that habitat loss is the biggest cause of extinction, but they are distanced from the reality,” says the Lomphat Wildlife Sanctuary Project M

Rare species losing habitats

BirdLife International Cambodia Programme has expressed concern about the presence of humans that are possibly disrupting the nesting of lesser adjutant storks in Lumphat Wildlife Sanctuary in Ratanakkiri province, a region under serious threat from habitat loss and disruption due to human activities. They became concerned after examining five lesser adjutant nests and discovered that two of those nests had failed, meaning that the storks’ that had built those nests mating efforts had not resulted in any live offspring. Bou Vorsak, Cambodia Programme Manager at BirdLife International, said on December 16 that the lesser adjutant stork is vulnerable, but in recent years it had been breeding successfully at the Lumphat Wildlife Sanctuary.

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