According to the reserve’s Director Le Ngoc Tuan, the finding was made using camera traps set in the reserve.
The discovery of giant muntjacs together with other indigenousanimals like Annamite striped rabbits, red-shanked douc langurs, andcrested arguses has proven the richness of the site’s biodiversity aswell as the efficiency of forest protection activities.
Therefore, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) is helping thereserve set more camera traps to take further images of rare specieshere, enriching the knowledge about biodiversity in Vietnam and ThuaThien-Hue in particular.
Thua Thien-Hue provincehas recently established the Saola reserve with the aim of protectingthe Saola (Pseudoryx nghetinhensis), a rare animal that is indigenous tothe central Truong Son mountain range. The region is home to one of therichest biodiversity in the world.-VNA