GENEVA: Sumatra's endangered elephants
and tigers should get a boost from an Indonesian government move to expand one
of their last havens, a four-year-old national park on the island, conservation
body WWF said on Thursday.
But WWF warned that increased efforts
would be vital to ensure that poaching and other illegal activities -- like
unsanctioned logging and settlement -- did not continue in the park, Tesso Nilo
in Sumatra's Riau Province.
"This is an important milestone towards
securing a future for the Sumatran elephant and tiger," said Mubariq Ahmad, head
of WWF in Indonesia as it was announced in Jakarta that the park area would be
more than doubled to 86,000 hectares (212,500 acres).
"Tesso Nilo is
still under serious threat from illegal activities, but if we can protect the
forests there it will give some of Sumatra's most endangered wildlife the
breathing room they need to survive," declared Ahmad.
WWF, whose
international headquarters are at Gland near Geneva, said 60 to 80 elephants and
some 50 tigers were believed to live in the area now to be covered by the
park.
Set up in 2004 with 38,000 hectares (93,900 acres), it also has
the highest lowland forest plant diversity known to science. Some 4,000 unique
species have been recorded and many more remain to be discovered, WWF
said.
Riau Province is home to about 210 elephants, down from around
1,250 just 25 years ago, and 192 tigers, whose numbers have dropped from around
650 over the same period.
The main cause of the decline of both
Sumatran species, WWF indicated, is deforestation, the rate of which in Riau is
the highest of any Indonesian province.
Some 65 percent of Riau's
forest cover, key to the animals' survival, has disappeared since the early
1980s, largely as a result of increased activity by global pulp and palm oil
companies -- and from illegal logging.
WWF said two of the world's
largest pulp and paper mills are located in the province, which had lost more
natural forest to pulpwood concessions than any other in
Indonesia.
The clearing of carbon-rich peat land and peat forests in
Riau have contributed to Indonesia having the world's third highest rate of
greenhouse gas emissions, behind only the United States and China, the
conservation body added.