Our Mission is to realize the vision of Her Majesty Queen Sirikit, The Queen Mother by reintroducing domesticated elephants into the wild, restoring wild habitats with indigenous plants and wildlife, researching and propagating knowledge about elephants and promoting appropriate management of elephants in Thailand for their long-term survival.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Trying to Balance the Budget
Ruttanaporn counts the cash donations received from the general public which helps support the Foundation's running expenses. คุณรัตนภรณ์ นับเงินบริจาคที่รวบรวมมาจากการหยอดตู้ของผู้ใจบุญตามตู้บริจาคที่ตั้งอยู่ตามสถานที่ต่างๆ เพื่อนำมาเป็นงบสนับสนุนการดำเนินงานของมูลนิธิฯ
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Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Elephant Bodyguard
Pang Deejai and Pang Noklae range at Phu Phan under the watchful guidance of Pang Bua Kaew.
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The Last Wild Elephant
Pang Bua Kaew, the last surviving wild elephant at Phu Phan National Park, is fit and healthy.
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Panorama Scriptless Filming
Panorama team films HM the Queen's elephant documentary without a script in Phu Phan National Park.
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Saturday, June 23, 2012
Friday, June 22, 2012
Villagers Training at Phu Phan National Park
Bundit Saowan, Foundation Director, presides at the opening ceremony of the Seminar and Training Course attended by over 100 villagers at the Phu Phan National Park, Sakhon Nakorn. Mor Taweepoke conducts the training session for the villagers. คุณบัณฑิต เสาวรรณ เป็นประธานเปิดโครงการฝึกอบรมราษฎรรอบพื้นที่โครงการทดลองปล่อยช้างคืนสู่ธรรมชาติ ตามแนวพระราชดำริ สมเด็จพระนางเจ้าฯ พระบรมราชินีนาถ ในพื้นที่อุทยานแห่งชาติภูพาน จังหวัดสกลนคร เมื่อวันที่ 21 มิถุนายน 2555
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Jacuzzi at Camp 1 Sublangka
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
The 10 Years Blog Book
Sivachai, Pitakpol and Ingon discuss the book layout with Suttinee and Premjitr at the office.
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Tuesday, June 19, 2012
BBC Elephant Report June 2011
The BBC presented an equally dismal picture in June 2011, noting, “Forest elephants in Africa, to some extent, escaped the ‘ivory holocaust’ during colonial times, and the widespread slaughter of their savannah-dwelling cousins for their ivory in the 1970s and 1980s. This was largely because they were hidden away in their obscure forest habitat in the vast Congo Basin.”
The elephants require large uninterrupted areas of wilderness to range through, “but as logging and resource extraction become more important in the region, the animals are squeezed into smaller pockets of forest where they become easily accessible to poachers.” The building of new roads not only contributes to diminishing the forest elephants’ habitat, but also provides access to formerly impenetrable tracts of rainforest.
Beyond the damage to the elephant populations themselves, it’s important to consider the environmental side effects of their extinction. As elephants graze and roam, they drop the seeds of food they’re eating along with a large helping of fertilizer in their dung.
The BBC explained that, “a myriad of other species depend on the structure of the forest that the elephants create.” And they quoted Stephen Blake, an elephant expert from the Max Planck Institute for Ornithology in Radolfzell, Germany, as saying, “Insects, mosses, lichens, invertebrates, other vertebrates; a whole gamut of animal, plant and fungal species are specific to certain trees or plants...If we lose elephants, we’re going to lose those trees; forest biodiversity as a whole is going to diminish.
Samuel Wasser, a researcher at the University of Washington, also noted the environmental impact in a 2008 article in The Telegraph, saying, the elephants “keep habitats open so other species that depend on such ecosystems can use them. Without elephants there will be major habitat changes, with negative effects on the many species that depend on the lost habitat.”
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Monday, June 18, 2012
A Healthy Srisakorn in Musth
Male bull elephants start to have musth when they reach 15-20 years old. This is Plai Srisakorn's second musth and he is 19 this year. The slight delay of the onset of musth may be the results of tranquilizers and medication he received in his childhood years.
เนื่องจากความสมบูรณืทั้งร่างกายและจิตใจที่ได้ใช้ชีวิตอย่างอิสระในป่าซับลังกาทำให้พลายศรีสาครมีอาการตกมัน
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Friday, June 15, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Pang Nidnoy at the Elephant Hospital
Veterinarians from Elephant hospital help Pang Nidnoy up. Pang Nidnoy was seriously injured, she can not stand by herself. Now she is under treatment at the Elephant Hospital.
ทางคณะสัตวแพทย์โรงพยาบาลช้างได้ช่วยเหลือพังนิดหน่อยโดยการช่วยพยุงให้พังนิดหน่อยลุกขึ้น แต่เนื่องจากขาหลังของพังนิดหน่อยบาดเจ็บสาหัสจึงไม่สามารถยืนได้ด้วยตัวเอง โดยขณะนี้พังนิดหน่อยยังต้องพักรักษาตัวอยู่ที่โรงพยาบาลช้าง จังหวัดลำปาง
Monday, June 11, 2012
Sunday, June 10, 2012
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