By Nick Marx | Director, Wildlife Rescue & Care Program
Rescued animals at Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Centre must be looked after regardless of a pandemic and 2020 was an especially busy year for us as we look back at our annual results. Overall, the volume of animals at Phnom Tamao was extraordinarily high, primarily due to the seizure of several large live animal shipments early in the year and bust in September of an illegal zoo by our Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team, which brought many new animals in need of care to the Centre. A total of 1,931 new animals arrived at PTWRC and 97 babies were born to resident animals in 2020. Our Nursery keepers were especially busy as well - baby sambar and muntjac deer, silvered langurs, macaques, civets and leopard cats are just a few of the infant mammals that arrived needing their specialized care. Fledgling birds also arrived regularly including many young raptors, particularly rescued black-shouldered kites due to the unfortunate current trend in Cambodia to keep these birds in captivity. 381 animals died during the year, which is in no way excessive because most were rescued from the illegal wildlife trade and many animals, particularly birds, arrive in very poor condition. 1,611 animals were released. Over 600 of these were lesser whistling ducks released on the Centre’s Main Lake. Animals released into the surrounding Phnom Tamao Protected Forest forest, such as Eld’s deer, muntjac, silvered langurs, small carnivores, eagles and other birds, are still around and are well, and many animals were taken for release at safe sites in other parts of the country. All this was done in addition to looking after the Centre’s sizeable permanent residents such as elephant Lucky!
Perhaps the highlight of the year for us at PTWRC was successfully hand-raising four infant black-shanked douc langurs for the first time ever. Six orphans of this Critically Endangered species were rescued between February and May. This leaf-eating species of primate is hard to raise and care for and two died shortly after arrival. We felt that disease was being transmitted to them by other primates at the Nursery, most notably macaques. Elephant keepers Sol and Vok looked after the next four that arrived at the elephants’ quarters. Despite the poor condition upon arrival of most of them, we have experienced very few problems with their care and they are still with us and are growing well. The only large new enclosure constructed during 2020 was to house this troupe of growing douc langurs once they advanced from the baby stage to being juveniles.
Led by Head Keeper, Try Sitheng, the animal keepers at PTWRC provided daily care to an average of ~1,500 animals in an exemplary fashion. We delivered animal food and necessary care throughout the year without any real problems, other than the frequent repairs required on our ageing animal food truck. Our greatest challenge remains – raising enough funds to continue paying the Centre’s whopping $10,000/month food bill for all animals besides elephants and tigers, without the funds previously earned from international visitors on our Behind The Scenes tour. Your generous donations during this difficult period have been critical to keeping all wildlife that arrives fed and cared for and enabling all those suitable for release to have a second chance at life in the wild. Thank you all so much!
By Nick Marx & Elisabeth Gish | Wildlife Rescue & Care Program
By Nick Marx | Director, Wildlife Rescue & Care Program
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