Prof Bao Huy of Tay Nguyen University’s Agriculture and Forestryfaculty said the centre would provide a heaven for wild elephants.
Speaking at a seminar held by his university and the province’sSub-department of Forest Protection on December 15, he said the projectalso seeked to build a veterinary centre for elephants, raise publicawareness about protecting the giant creatures, and help elephantowners get their animals to breed.
Huy is also the head of the elephant preservation project.
Advanced technologies for elephant protection and breeding would be obtained from international agencies, he said.
Officials responsible for conserving the pachyderms would be given professional training, he added.
The project, to be approved by the provincial People’s Committee, willcost 58 billion VND (3.3 million USD) and is expected to be carried outin 2010-14.
Dak Lak has 80-110 wild elephants and 61 domesticated ones, accordingto a survey conducted for the project by a research group from theuniversity.
However, the number of domesticated elephants is shrinking rapidly –there were 502 in 1985 – and they are in danger of disappearing unlessmeasures for proper breeding and reproduction are immediately taken.
In the province, elephants are found mostly in Buon Don, Ea Sup and Ea H’ Leo districts.
Of 310,000ha of forests in the province where wild elephants live, only160,000 ha, mostly special use and protected forests, provide them withsafe habitats.
But with these forests shrinking and wild elephants rapidly losingtheir habitat, there is increasing conflict between humans and wildelephants.
In Ea Sup district, for instance, wild elephants have been enteringfarmlands and destroying crops in Ia Loi, Ya Lop and Ea R’Ve communes.
Ha Cong Binh, head of the Sub-department of Forest Protection, said theappearance of nomadic people and the noise of machinery affected thewild elephants./.