Saturday, 9 November 2013
The hog deer, today listed as Endangered on The IUCN Red List of
Threatened Species, once ranged throughout large areas of South and
mainland Southeast Asia, but has suffered regional population
decimations due to hunting, habitat loss and degradation. Cambodia is
home to the only known wild populations of the Axis porcinus annamiticus
subspecies of the deer.
A field team, funded by the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund,
conducted interview surveys in local villages, following up on hog deer
reports with rapid field surveys looking for tracks or dung.
Ten potential areas of habitat were identified, with surveys
confirming hog deer populations in five. Sarah Brook, Species Manager
for Fauna & Flora International, Cambodia said, "This is a
remarkable discovery given not only the species' vulnerability to hunting, but also because all of the sites were outside the existing protected area system."
The hog deer is the predominant large mammal of today's Mekong
floodplains wet grasslands. It's an important species to conserve in its
own right but also a tiger prey species. Sarah continued, "Given the
recent interest in reintroducing tigers back into landscapes in
Indochina, there's an opportunity for this to go hand in hand with the
protection and reintroduction of the hog deer."
Prior to this survey ,
Indochinese hog deer had been found at only two locations in Cambodia
since the 1980s – north of Kratie and near BotumSakor National Park in
southwest Cambodia. Hog deer were rediscovered near Kratie in 2006
following reports from local villagers, later confirmed by
camera-trapping surveys, and preliminary surveys estimated 50-80
individuals in the area.
No conservation actions have been undertaken since the discovery of
the species near Botum Sakor National Park in 2008. "Based on this
year's surveys, it is clear that very few individuals or small groups
remain at several sites. The two sites with more hog deer are small and
under increasing pressure from agricultural encroachment and hunting has
been reported at all of the sites. Clearly, time is running out to try
to conserve this deer and its fast disappearing habitat," Sarah said.
Hog deer are very easy to hunt and their preference for grassland
floodplain habitats usually ensures they occur in very close proximity
to human settlements. At one of the survey sites a hog deer fawn was
found hiding in the grass, which is in part encouraging, but also
highlights the ease with which they able to be captured and hunted.
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