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Affected Areas: Asia
Asia has lost almost 95
percent of its frontier forests. Apart from the Mediterranean and Middle East -- where all
such forests have
disappeared -- this represents the world's greatest loss of frontier forest outside of
Europe. China and India today have just 20
percent of their original forest cover. Of these remaining forests, less than 10 percent
can be classified as frontier. In the 20 years between 1960 and 1980 alone, Asia lost
almost a third of its tropical forest cover, the highest rate of forest conversion in the
world.
On mainland Southeast Asia, most frontiers are gone. The isolated pockets left are
confined primarily to Burma, Laos, and Cambodia, where war and civil unrest until recently
inhibited development. With peace have come new threats from commercial loggers who have
already exhausted forests in Thailand and peninsular Malaysia --
where harvest and import restrictions now encourage logging companies to move on to
neighboring nations.
Most of Asia's remaining frontier forest is confined to the islands of Borneo, Sumatra,
Sulawesi, and Irian Jaya. Even here, however, loggers have exploited most accessible
forests along coasts and major rivers. Agriculture and poorly planned resettlement
programs also take a toll. Between 1969 and 1994, Indonesia's transmigration program moved
8 million people to the nation's forested islands where
1.7 million hectares of tropical forest were soon stripped.
More than half of Asia's last frontiers are under moderate to high threat, particularly
from logging. An even greater long-term worry is Asia's burgeoning population and its ever
increasing demand for food and agricultural land. Between 1990 and 1995 alone, the
region's largely rural population grew by more than 270 million people. The world's most
densely populated region, Asia had more than 1 person for every hectare of land in 1995.
Mainly Threatened Areas:
Ratanakiri province
Forest type: Tropical
Geographic location: Cambodia
Threat: Illegal logging for export to Vietnam. Outside protected areas,
most of the province is already under concession to foreign logging companies.
At risk: Resident minority groups, already evicted from other areas by
logging companies. Rice farming and local fishing here and elsewhere in the Mekong River
watershed. Kouprey and other highly endangered
species.
Sundarbans
Forest type: Tropical
Geographic location: Bangladesh and India
Threat: Logging, fuelwood collection
At risk: The world's largest mangrove forest. Habitat for the world's
largest and possibly only viable population of the Bengal tiger. Fish and forest products
provide a living for up to 300,000 local families.
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Young boy at Annapurna
Conservation Area, Nepal

Vietnamese tribeswoman in
traditional costume

Kenyah Dayak
people Chief with his wife Long Alango Village, Kayan Mentarang, East Kalimantan,
Indonesia |