Over the last decade, Vietnam has adopted policies and actions to fulfill its commitments to protecting rare and endangered wildlife, which is highly valued by the international community.
Located in the buffer zone of Tam Dao National Park in the northern province of Vinh Phuc, Tam Dao Bear Rescue Center opened in April 2008. The 1.2 ha center with an investment of over 3.3 million USD can accommodate 200 bears. Doctor Cahalane and other vets from Animals Asia do surgery on Zebedee, a moon bear rescued from a bile farm in the central province of Thua Thien-Hue by Animals Asia. Little turtles at the Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation Center in the northern province of Ninh Binh receive calcium-added food for shell growth. A health worker at the Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation Center applies medicine to a diseased turtle. Turtles are nursed in a semi wild environment at the Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation Center. Two small monkeys who have just been rescued are afraid of strangers. The helmeted hornbill, a critically endangered bird species with an ivory casque (helmet like structure on the head), has a commercial value three to five times that of ivory and is subject to rampant illegal trade. A foreign volunteer and a health worker from the center do a medical check on a pangolin. A pangolin has just had surgery to remove a decayed part of its tail by vets from the Asian Carnivore and Pangolin Conservation Center. The center annually releases carnivores into their natural environment. (Photo: Asian Carnivore and Pangolin Conservation Center) The Cuc Phuong Endangered Primates Rescue Center is home to six endangered primate species. Hanoi Health Council and Tam Dao Bear Rescue Center jointly organize monthly communication sessions to advocate protecting bears in target localities during which locals receive free medical check-ups and medicines. A girl reads information about protecting bears at Tam Dao Bear Rescue Center. |
VNA