[PHNOM PENH POST]
Kampi, in Kratie province, is just one of countless Cambodian fishing villages that calls the Mekong River home.
About 130 families make up the tiny community of subsistence farmers
and fishermen, 230 kilometres north of the Kingdom’s capital.
Kampi also boasts one of Cambodia’s most unusual eco-tourism draws.
Thousands
of tourists arrive in Kampi and several neighbouring villages each year
to catch a glimpse of the portly, slate-blue creatures known as
Irrawaddy dolphins.
Round-headed and stockier than their more
familiar oceanic cousin, the bottlenose dolphin, they have become famous
throughout the region for their odd looks.
They are also frighteningly close to extinction.
Kampi is worried that further decreases in dolphin numbers will dampen its main source of tourism.
Locals
can make upwards of US$3 a day for each tourist staying overnight in
their homes, according to a statement from the Cambodian Rural
Development Team, a local NGO.
Group tours can bring in considerably more. Chartering a boat to tour the dolphins’ habitat costs upwards of $9 a person.
CRDT
also offers three-day trips that “cost around US$60 in total, much of
which is then given to the locals”, CRDT executive director Sum Mao
says.
Enticed by this tourism revenue, locals have begun working
in collaboration with the CRDT to construct fish farms to help conserve
the dolphins’ dwindling food supply.
“By using these farms, villagers on the Mekong are able to eat fish without depleting the dolphins’ supply”, Sum Mao says.
Fishing
with nets in the region has been outlawed, as has the practice of
fishing with grenades and collecting dead fish that float to the
surface.
CRDT has also provided “a range of livelihood
alternatives in 11 villages situated around the six highest priority
deep-pool conservation areas”.
Sum Mao lists such initiatives as “teaching to raise livestock or chickens, and rice farming” along with various other measures.
He
say CRDT has been working to provide the village with renewable energy
sources such as solar power to soften the impact of environmental
degradation on the Mekong.
Such intricate care for the creatures
was not always taken. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, many dolphins
were killed when the US practised its bombing campaign over rural
Cambodia.
For years afterwards, hungry villagers, dismayed that they could not eat the dolphins, would shoot them for entertainment.
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