Malaysia Wilderness is in Tourists' Hands

12/7/98
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Title: Malaysia Wilderness is in Tourists' Hands
Source: Reuters
Status: Copyrighted, contact source to reprint
Date: 12/7/98
Byline: Chris McCall

TAMAN NEGARA, Malaysia, Dec 8 (Reuters) - Millennia ago aboriginal hunters
came here to fish. Decades ago Malay princes and colonial officers came to
shoot game.

Today tourists come to take photographs of endangered species.

Taman Negara, peninsular Malaysia's oldest national park, has finally
taken off as a tourist destination. Shorter flying times and a surge of
interest in tropical rainforests have helped put it firmly on the
Southeast Asian tourist trail.

In the past 10 years visitor numbers have more than tripled. Some 60,000
visitors stayed at park headquarters in 1997, the Parks and Wildlife
Department says.

The figure is not far short of the area's carrying capacity, estimated at
70,000 to 90,000. How many can come without damaging the very thing they
want to see? That question is increasingly being asked.

PEOPLE SCARE ANIMALS

To get to park headquarters at Kuala Tahan requires a three-hour boat
ride. Returning after a few days in the park, one British expatriate
laments that he could not see more wildlife.

``I suppose with all the people, it frightens them away,'' he said. ``I
was working in Malaysia in 1987 -- not so many people came up here then.''

Taman Negara shelters some of Malaysia's last tigers and rhinoceros as
well as thousands of stunning butterflies.

Although there is plenty to see around park headquarters, visitors have
already had a subtle impact, says an official at the Parks and Wildlife
Department. Animals that once could be seen within two km (one and a half
miles) of park headquarters now keep up to six km (four miles) away.

To relieve pressure, new entry points have been opened in the three states
the park straddles -- Pahang, Kelantan and Terengganu, the official says.

Some people wonder if this will only worsen the problem.

``It cannot be denied that the increasing numbers will have some
detrimental effects on the park,'' said Sabri Zain, spokesman for the
Malaysian branch of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).

``They are certainly aware that in the long term the carrying capacity is
something that must be monitored.''

Accommodation at Kuala Tahan, 180 km (120 miles) northeast of Kuala
Lumpur, was privatised in 1994. It is now in the hands of Taman Negara
Resort, owned by Malaysian hotels group Pernas.

There are chalets, hostels and a campsite. Visitors can safely walk a
short distance into the forest on well-trodden paths. Further on they
become less well-kept -- true jungle trails, blocked in places by fallen
trees.

For a small fee, guides take small groups on night-time walks in the
rainforest to see mushrooms that glow in the dark and hear the night
orchestra of thousands of chirping insects.

A 400-metre (1,300-ft) ``canopy walkway'' takes visitors right up into the
treetops on suspension bridges. Or visitors can spend a night in a 'hide',
from which they may see larger animals drinking at a salt lick.

It is educational and includes displays highlighting some of the plants
and animals that Malaysia has already lost.

WORLD'S OLDEST RAINFOREST?

But the canopy walkway is often so full of visitors that the animals they
come to see are scared off. People's expectations may be unrealistic, says
Sabri of WWF.

``In tropical forests you cannot see the sort of things you see in the
savannah,'' he said. ``It is a matter of patience. If you are in the hide
and you start chattering away, generally animals are not going to go out
to the salt lick.''

Taman Negara is said to be the world's oldest rainforest, dating back 130
million years to the time of the dinosaurs. It is one of the last major
areas of rainforest in peninsular Malaysia.

The park was created in the 1930s, replacing a game reserve. Invasion by
Japan, a communist insurgency and sheer distance kept tourist numbers
down, but all that has changed.

These days Malaysia's stricken economy has plenty of use for tourist
dollars.

The orang asli, aboriginal descendants of the pre-Malay inhabitants of the
peninsula, still live in Taman Negara, largely avoiding contact with the
outside world. They may well be hoping that the outside world will not
force itself on them.

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.

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