Showing 51 - 60 of 2,840
News, Supoj Wancharoen, Published on 04/09/2025
» The Department of Rural Roads (DRR) is pushing ahead with a wildlife sanctuary road project in Kanchanaburi province, with construction set to be completed in 2027.
News, Steven R Galster, Published on 21/03/2020
» As Thailand and its neighbors scramble to contain the pandemic and panic, we urgently need to start building a response to the source of Covid-19, or risk having new outbreaks hit us even harder. There is good reason to believe that we know the source -- global wildlife trade -- and that there is a solution.
News, Thana Boonlert, Published on 23/04/2020
» Conservationists are demanding an end to the wildlife trade to stamp out the root cause of zoonotic outbreaks such as the coronavirus pandemic, which likely originated at a wet market in Wuhan, China and has infected more than 2,800 people in Thailand.
Waedao Harai, Published on 10/10/2020
» NARATHIWAT: A woman who admitted selling protected wildlife online for two years has been arrested and 61 wild birds and other protected animals seized from her house in Rueso district.
AFP, Published on 11/03/2018
» JAKARTA: rom cutting-edge DNA barcoding to smartphone apps that can identify illegal wildlife sales, conservationists are turning to hi-tech tools in their battle against Indonesia's animal traffickers.
Piyarach Chongcharoen, Published on 16/08/2018
» KANCHANABURI: Four gaurs were found dead in Thung Yai Naresuan Wildlife Sanctuary in Sangkhla Buri district, supposedly due to a fall from a cliff while crossing Ranti River in this western province.
New York Times, Published on 25/09/2018
» Chumlong Lemthongthai, a Thai citizen, and his band of gun-toting prostitutes were surely one of the most remarkable of the ‘pseudo-hunting’ gangs behind the ongoing rhino poaching crisis.
AFP, Published on 09/08/2019
» WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump's administration has re-authorised the use of controversial poison traps known as "cyanide bombs" to kill wild foxes, coyotes and feral dogs despite overwhelming opposition from conservation groups.
AFP, Published on 28/08/2019
» GENEVA - A global wildlife summit has decided to regulate trade in giraffes and tighten protections for endangered animals including elephants, triggering a threat from disgruntled southern African nations to leave an international treaty.
AFP, Published on 29/08/2019
» GENEVA - A global wildlife summit has decided to regulate trade in giraffes and tighten protections for endangered animals including elephants, triggering a threat from disgruntled southern African nations to leave an international treaty.