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SPECIAL REPORT Burma’s Vanishing Orchids
PRACHUAP KHIRI KHAN, Thailand — The orchid market at Dan Singkhon in southern Thailand attracts thousands of enthusiasts, who don’t seem to be worried that their love for these exotic plants is threatening many species with extinction. Many of the threatened orchids come from the forests of nearby Burma, imported at small cost with the cooperation of Burmese and Thai border officials.
Thai customs authorities at the nearby Burmese border charge an average of 10 baht (30 US Cents) per imported plant, which can range from a simple orchid to an example of the world’s oldest species. No official checks are made of the imported plants, many of which are on lists of protected and endangered species.
One international expert, Jeffrey Wood, curator of the orchid herbarium of the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, in Britain, examined photographs of the plants on sale at the Dan Singkhon market and said: “It's quite upsetting to see such a large variety of species being stripped off the trees in Burma. A lot of these species wouldn't survive, since they come from the mountains. It is very damaging to the local orchid flora. “It’s like the days back in the late 19th century when nurseries used to send out collectors and they used to strip an area bare. The same thing’s happening in the remoter parts of Burma.” Another expert, J F Maxwell, curator of the Chiang Mai University Herbarium, said many of the imported plants failed to survive when removed from their natural habitat. “Plants have been around longer than people, so the idea of people killing everything is revolting, especially if it is based on greed and stupidity,” said Maxwell, who joined Wood in identifying the flora on sale at the Dan Singkhon market, using photo documentation. Burma and Thailand are signatories to the Convention on the Elimination of Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), which bans or restricts trading in all wild orchid species. Burma signed CITES in 1997 and management of the treaty is under the country’s Ministry of Forestry. Thailand signed in 1983. Among orchids listed in appendix 1 are those of the orchid genus paphiopedilum, which experts say could become extinct in Burma unless trade in the plants is stopped. Fifty Burmese species of the dendrobium genus are also listed by CITES as endangered—an indication of the great variety of orchids to be found in Burma’s forests. Experts point out that these orchids come from very delicate ecosystems and are unlikely to survive when replanted. “Most die during their first dry season,” said Maxwell. “Almost all ground orchids die probably because of microrhiza dysfunction. They simply can't cope away from their native niche, the epiphytic ones may linger around for longer, but most do not survive. 1 | 2
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