The Japan Times - 'It's gone': conservation science in Thailand's burning forest

EUR -
AED 4.007862
AFN 78.059331
ALL 98.649563
AMD 426.663758
ANG 1.953448
AOA 995.160462
ARS 1173.547788
AUD 1.810647
AWG 1.966861
AZN 1.906694
BAM 1.950705
BBD 2.200833
BDT 132.419876
BGN 1.955897
BHD 0.411274
BIF 3240.06369
BMD 1.091185
BND 1.472389
BOB 7.531982
BRL 6.50379
BSD 1.089943
BTN 93.947889
BWP 15.384943
BYN 3.56711
BYR 21387.223316
BZD 2.189442
CAD 1.547954
CDF 3132.791789
CHF 0.936255
CLF 0.028173
CLP 1081.113596
CNY 7.975031
CNH 8.048077
COP 4802.599202
CRC 559.594769
CUC 1.091185
CUP 28.916399
CVE 109.975732
CZK 25.178021
DJF 194.099029
DKK 7.466023
DOP 68.368292
DZD 145.718989
EGP 55.947227
ERN 16.367773
ETB 143.725565
FJD 2.546007
FKP 0.85732
GBP 0.855353
GEL 3.000464
GGP 0.85732
GHS 16.895264
GIP 0.85732
GMD 78.018536
GNF 9432.190566
GTQ 8.406351
GYD 228.043168
HKD 8.478945
HNL 27.884888
HRK 7.537581
HTG 142.61097
HUF 407.199094
IDR 18462.684206
ILS 4.110739
IMP 0.85732
INR 94.137555
IQD 1427.705463
IRR 45938.882935
ISK 145.116458
JEP 0.85732
JMD 172.107307
JOD 0.773543
JPY 160.645869
KES 141.306963
KGS 94.995391
KHR 4362.006341
KMF 491.579027
KPW 982.040711
KRW 1611.385499
KWD 0.336183
KYD 0.908294
KZT 564.597034
LAK 23611.491445
LBP 97663.80827
LKR 325.905626
LRD 217.99459
LSL 21.227632
LTL 3.221985
LVL 0.660046
LYD 6.061058
MAD 10.415976
MDL 19.35287
MGA 5102.047684
MKD 61.47246
MMK 2290.816872
MNT 3829.805834
MOP 8.723175
MRU 43.147881
MUR 49.21899
MVR 16.805124
MWK 1890.019223
MXN 22.519229
MYR 4.900513
MZN 69.737871
NAD 21.225886
NGN 1706.045756
NIO 40.108179
NOK 11.923841
NPR 150.334486
NZD 1.954285
OMR 0.420063
PAB 1.089953
PEN 4.049194
PGK 4.500246
PHP 62.668897
PKR 305.960976
PLN 4.267504
PYG 8738.495684
QAR 3.973068
RON 4.977548
RSD 117.170321
RUB 93.566967
RWF 1543.182399
SAR 4.096226
SBD 9.074655
SCR 15.672711
SDG 655.259815
SEK 10.926083
SGD 1.474884
SHP 0.8575
SLE 24.82443
SLL 22881.602168
SOS 622.918627
SRD 40.213464
STD 22585.323572
SVC 9.536915
SYP 14187.103336
SZL 21.214726
THB 37.986873
TJS 11.842744
TMT 3.819147
TND 3.360032
TOP 2.555667
TRY 41.475169
TTD 7.392436
TWD 35.93654
TZS 2934.195951
UAH 44.895124
UGX 4045.766291
USD 1.091185
UYU 46.370581
UZS 14132.604194
VES 79.946772
VND 28398.086062
VUV 136.46298
WST 3.102469
XAF 654.307934
XAG 0.036193
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.948982
XDR 0.813671
XOF 654.236167
XPF 119.331742
YER 268.049251
ZAR 21.320606
ZMK 9821.972548
ZMW 30.383424
ZWL 351.361081
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.21

    +0.18%

  • RBGPF

    -7.7300

    60.27

    -12.83%

  • NGG

    0.8300

    63.73

    +1.3%

  • BCC

    0.9230

    92.813

    +0.99%

  • RELX

    0.5400

    46.07

    +1.17%

  • JRI

    0.3220

    11.582

    +2.78%

  • SCS

    -0.1300

    10.07

    -1.29%

  • RYCEF

    0.4500

    8.68

    +5.18%

  • BCE

    -0.7400

    21.34

    -3.47%

  • RIO

    -1.3500

    53.21

    -2.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    22.52

    +0.18%

  • VOD

    -0.0350

    8.315

    -0.42%

  • BTI

    0.7300

    40.16

    +1.82%

  • AZN

    0.2100

    66

    +0.32%

  • BP

    -0.4050

    26.765

    -1.51%

  • GSK

    -0.4950

    34.345

    -1.44%

'It's gone': conservation science in Thailand's burning forest
'It's gone': conservation science in Thailand's burning forest / Photo: Lillian SUWANRUMPHA - AFP

'It's gone': conservation science in Thailand's burning forest

Scientist Inna Birchenko began to cry as she described the smouldering protected forest in Thailand where she was collecting samples from local trees shrouded in wildfire smoke.

Text size:

"This beautiful, diverse community of trees and animals is being destroyed as you see it, as you watch it," she said.

Birchenko, a geneticist at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, was collecting seeds and leaves in Umphang Wildlife Sanctuary with colleagues from Britain and Thailand.

They will study how temperature and moisture affect germination and whether genetics dictate those responses.

That may one day help ensure that reforestation is done with trees that can withstand the hotter temperatures and drier conditions caused by climate change.

But in Umphang, a remote region in Thailand's northwest, the scientists confronted the toll that human activity and climate change are already having on forests that are supposed to be pristine and protected.

Birchenko and her colleagues hiked kilometre after kilometre through burned or still-smouldering forest, each footstep stirring up columns of black and grey ash.

They passed thick fallen trees that were smoking or even being licked by dancing flames, and traversed stretches of farmland littered with corn husks, all within the sanctuary's boundaries.

The wildlife for which the sanctuary is famous -- hornbills, deer, elephants and even tigers -- was nowhere to be seen.

Instead, there were traces of the fire's effect: a palm-sized cicada, its front neon yellow, its back end charred black; and the nest of a wild fowl, harbouring five scorched eggs.

"My heart is broken," said Nattanit Yiamthaisong, a PhD student at Chiang Mai University's Forest Restoration and Research Unit (FORRU) who is working with Birchenko and her Kew colleague Jan Sala.

"I expected a wildlife sanctuary or national park is a protected area. I'm not expecting a lot of agricultural land like this, a lot of fire along the way."

- Global threat of wildfires -

The burning in Umphang Wildlife Sanctuary is hardly an outlier.

Wildfires are common in Thailand during the country's spring burning season, when farmers set fields alight to prepare for new crops.

Some communities have permission to live and farm plots inside protected areas because of their long-standing presence on the land.

Traditionally, burning has helped farmers enrich soil, and fire can be a natural part of a forest's ecosystem. Some seeds rely on fire to germinate.

But agricultural burning can quickly spread to adjacent forest -- intentionally or by accident.

The risks are heightened by the drier conditions of climate change and growing economic pressure on farmers, who are keen to plant more frequently and across larger areas.

Experts warn that forests subjected to repeated, high-intensity fires have no chance to regenerate naturally, and may never recover.

Fire data based on satellite images compiled by US space agency NASA shows hotspots and active fires burning across many protected areas in Thailand over recent weeks.

Around tourist hotspot Chiang Mai, firefighting helicopters drop water on local wildfires, at a cost of thousands of dollars per mission.

But remote Umphang is far from the public eye.

Park rangers protect the area, but they are frequently underpaid, poorly resourced and overstretched, local environmentalists say.

It's a long-standing problem in Thailand, whose Department of National Parks has sometimes closed protected areas in a bid to prevent fires from spreading. The department did not respond to AFP requests for comment.

And the challenge is hardly unique to Thailand. Devastating blazes have ravaged wealthy California, Japan and South Korea in recent months.

- Deforestation at 'very high speed' -

Still, it was a sobering sight for Sala, a seed germination expert at Kew.

"The pristine rainforest that we were expecting to see, it's actually not here any more, it's gone," he said.

"It really shows the importance of conservation, of preserving biodiversity. Everything is being deforested at a very, very high speed."

Sala and Birchenko work with Kew's Millennium Seed Bank, which holds nearly 2.5 million seeds from over 40,000 wild plant species.

They want to "unlock" knowledge from the seed bank and help partners like FORRU, which has spent decades working out how to rebuild healthy forests in Thailand.

The partnership will map the genetic structure and diversity of three tree species, predict their resilience to climate change, and eventually delineate seed zones in Thailand.

"We hope that some of the population will be more resilient to climate change. And then... we can make better use of which populations to use for reforestation," said Sala.

Back in Britain, seeds will be germinated at varying temperatures and moisture levels to find their upper limits.

Genetic analysis will show how populations are related and which mutations may produce more climate-resilient trees.

But first the team needs samples.

The scientists are focusing on three species: albizia odoratissima, phyllanthus emblica -- also known as Indian gooseberry -- and sapindus rarak, a kind of soapberry tree.

The three grow across different climates in Thailand, are not endangered and have traditionally been used by local communities, who can help locate them.

Still, much of the search unfolds something like an Easter egg hunt, with the team traipsing through forest, scanning their surroundings for the leaf patterns of their target trees.

- 'Capsule of genetic diversity' -

"Ma Sak?" shouts Sala, using the local name for sapindus rarak, whose fruits were once used as a natural detergent.

It's up to FORRU nursery and field technician Thongyod Chiangkanta, a former park ranger and plant identification expert, to confirm.

Ideally seeds are collected from fruit on the tree, but the branches may be dozens of feet in the air.

A low-tech solution is at hand -- a red string with a weight attached to one end is hurled towards the canopy and looped over some branches.

Shaking it sends down a hail of fruit, along with leaves for Birchenko to analyse. Separate leaf and branch samples are carefully pressed to join the more than seven million specimens at Kew's herbarium.

The teams will collect thousands of seeds in all, carefully cutting open samples at each stop to ensure they are not rotten or infested.

They take no more than a quarter of what is available, leaving enough for natural growth from the "soil seed bank" that surrounds each tree.

Each successful collection is a relief after months of preparation, but the harsh reality of the forest's precarious future hangs over the team.

"It's this excitement of finding the trees... and at the same time really sad because you know that five metres (16 feet) next to the tree there's a wildfire, there's degraded area, and I assume that in the next years these trees are going to be gone," said Sala.

The team is collecting at seven locations across Thailand, gathering specimens that are "a capsule of genetic diversity that we have preserved for the future", said Birchenko.

"We are doing something, but we are doing so little and potentially also so late."

K.Inoue--JT