The Dak Lak Elephant Conservation Centre has reported that the numberof wild elephants has dropped to 60 – 70 individuals at present fromover 550 in 1980, attributing it to deforestation and poaching for theirtusks, hair and skin.
Meanwhile, the population of domesticated elephants has shrunk from 502 in 1980 to 49 now, down over 90 percent.
The herd is forecast to disappear in 20 – 30 years if the members do not reproduce.
Facing such a situation, the province in 2013 approved an urgentconservation project worth nearly 85 billion VND (4.05 million USD).
Director of the centre Huynh Trung Luan said 43 (19 male and 24female) of the 49 domestic elephants are in the fertile age.
However, it’s not easy for them to reproduce since they are raisedseparately, and the centre is not large enough to keep them alltogether, he added.
From 2005 to 2012, 14,000hectares of forest in Buon Don, Ea Sup and Ea H’lao districts, whichused to be home to a large number of elephants, were destroyed. Andpoaching has also pushed the wide elephant population down even further.
Luan added that up to 60 percent of the fund is sourced from the State budget, but it has not been allocated to Dak Lak.
The province now only has enough money to pay salaries to its staff and cannot afford equipment necessary for the work.
Elephants are a specialty of Dak Lak’s tourism, and conserving theanimal not only helps maintain a precious genetic source but alsopreserves the cultural identity of the region.-VNA