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This article is from The Star Online (http://thestar.com.my)

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2004/7/2/nation/8349801 & sec=nation

 

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Friday July 2, 2004

Heron surprise near landfill

BY TAN CHENG LI

 

RAWANG: The Selayang landfill might be closed to protect a newly discovered

heron breeding site, believed to be the largest in Selangor and the second

largest in the peninsula.

 

Selangor executive councillor for Tourism, Health and Consumer Affairs Datuk Dr

Lim Thuang Seng said the heronry near the Bandar Tasik Puteri residential estate

was worth preserving because it was an important bird nesting ground and had

tourism potential.

 

“It & #8217;s amazing to see so many birds here. It should be developed as an

eco-tourism project to complement other sites in Selangor,” he told reporters

during a site visit yesterday.

 

Surveys by the Malaysian Nature Society (MNS) showed that 43 bird species

& #8211; of which 28 are totally protected & #8211; inhabit the area at an old

mining pond. Two totally protected species, the Malayan black-crowned night

heron and the purple heron, breed there.

 

Lim feared that polluting leachate from the landfill adjacent to the pond might

kill fish that the birds depend upon. He said the dump, in use since 1996, would

be closed once an alternative location was found.

 

 

 

Lim said the breeding ground was also threatened by proposed housing

development in surrounding land. He said talks would be held with the Selayang

council on the matter.

 

Meanwhile, the Selangor Department of Wildlife Protection and National Parks

has proposed to the Gombak District Land Office that the site be gazetted as a

bird sanctuary. Department director Habsah Muda said signs prohibiting hunting

would be put up.

 

The MNS estimated that the site hosted some 500 black-crowned night heron,

making it the second biggest heron breeding site in the peninsula after the one

in Kuala Gula, Perak.

 

MNS executive officer Andrew Sebastian urged for immediate protection of the

site to prevent poaching.

 

“Enforcement by wildlife officers should be stepped up because this place is

highly accessible. Eco-tourism can help protect the site but it must be properly

planned.”

 

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