Way Kambas National Park
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| Way Kambas National Park | |
|---|---|
| IUCN Category II (National Park) | |
| Location | Sumatra, Indonesia |
| Area | 1,300 km² |
| Established | 1989 |
Way Kambas National Park is a large national park covering 1,300 square kilometres in Lampung province, southern Sumatra, Indonesia.
Way Kambas consists of swamp forest and lowland rain forest, but was extensively logged before becoming a reserve in 1972 so there is little primary forest. The reserve still has a few Sumatran Tigers and reasonable numbers of elephants. It is also provides excellent birdwatching, with the rare White-winged Duck among the species present. Accommodation is available at the village of Way Kanan, where there is a small guest house.
Another special feature of this national park is the Sumatran Rhino still present in the area. Only 275 remain in South East Asia today. In Way Kambas a managed breeding center or Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary (SRS) has been build up in 1995. At this moment 5 Sumatran Rhinos live at the Sanctuary, most have been translocated from zoos to the large enclosures (with natural habitat) at the SRS.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Paul Jepson (1997) Fielding's birding Indonesia (Periplus Editions) ISBN 1-56952-133-6
- World Database on Protected Areas: Record of Way Kambas National Park
- RRC: Sumatran Rhino Sanctuary Reports
[edit] External Links
- Pictures of SRS, Way Kambas on the RRC

