For as long as the elephants could remember — and that is a
long time — the path to the river snaked down the hillside through jungle so
dense a troop of pachyderms could simply vanish.
But about three decades ago, humans decided they, too, wanted
to get to the river, to gaze at the waterfalls that cascaded into the Khao Yai
National Park in central Thailand. The humans paved over part of the elephants’
trail with cement. They built toilets and snack kiosks.
he elephants, though, still needed to reach the river. They
hewed close to the old route, the one imprinted on generations of pachyderm
brains, but not so close that the day-trippers, with their picnics of sticky
rice and grilled pork, would see them.
It was a fatal diversion. The new trail passed a cliff and an
area prone to flash floods. Elephant after elephant drowned. Last October, a
baby elephant fell into the roiling waters. Others charged in to save the calf.
All told, 11 elephants died.
Since the coronavirus pandemic accelerated in March, Khao
Yai, Thailand’s oldest national park, has been closed to human visitors for the
first time since it opened in 1962. Without the jeeps and the crowds, the
park’s 300 or so elephants have been able to roam freely, venturing onto paths
once packed with humans. Rarely spotted animals, like the Asian black bear or
the gaur, the world’s largest bovine, have emerged, too.
“The park has been able to restore itself,” said Chananya
Kanchanasaka, a national park department veterinarian. “We are excited to see
the animals are coming out.”
Pandemic lockdowns have given nature a breather all around
the world, bringing animals to unexpected places. Cougars toured the deserted
streets of Santiago, the Chilean capital. Wild boars have strolled through the
lanes of Haifa, Israel. Fish catches off Vietnam are teeming again.
In Thailand, nature rebounded quickly, too. In late April, a
herd of about 30 dugong — a relatively rare marine mammal — showed up off a
cape once crowded with tourist boats. Leatherback turtles and blacktip reef
sharks have returned to other holiday hot spots, too. (In other places,
elephants and monkeys that normally play a part in the tourist trade are
suffering, however.)
The reprieve for Thailand’s wildlife has provoked a debate in
a country where the bond with nature has long been framed as one of domination,
either the jungle consuming people or people consuming the jungle.
Beyond the pillaging of its own rain forests, Thailand is a
key way station on global wildlife trafficking routes, with horns, tusks and
scales from as far away as Africa making their way to China.
Wild elephants from the region’s forests are trapped and
mentally broken down to perform tricks for tourists. Poaching and logging are
rampant in Thailand.
In 2018, a Thai construction tycoon was found in a wildlife
sanctuary west of Khao Yai with a cache of weapons and the remains of a black
leopard, a barking deer and a pheasant. A leopard’s tail was discovered in a
soup pot.
Over the years, as park visitors have been educated on how to
approach nature, their behavior has improved, said Somporn Chaikarn, a Khao Yai
senior ranger who has worked here for 33 years.
“Tourists don’t drive drunk in the park anymore,” he said.
“That’s a big improvement.”
Early in his career, Mr. Somporn, 57, helped build the path
down to the Haew Narok waterfall so visitors could gaze up at the cascades that
tumble down a nearly 550-foot descent.
Over the years, park employees have tried to reroute the elephants
from their old trail, building concrete posts and other barriers. They have
installed checkpoints. But elephants kept returning because many of the 108
species of plant they like to eat in the park flourish there.
“You cannot stop an elephant if it really wants to do
something,” Mr. Somporn said.
Thais, he said, have a special relationship with Elephas
maximus. Thailand’s great warrior kings had their favorite elephants to ride
during battle. Back when the country was known as Siam, its flag featured a
white elephant on a red background.
“We like them because they are cute and because they helped
us during times of war,” Mr. Somporn said.
Khao Yai, which covers about 155 square miles and is part of
a larger UNESCO World Heritage Site, is believed to have the largest population
of wild elephants of any national park in Thailand.
As roads were built through the park, the elephants liked to
walk on the warm asphalt and began to treat passing cars as playthings, said
Kanchit Srinopawan, who was the head of the park until March and now is the
director of the office of natural resources and environment for Prachin Buri
Province.
“They like sedans, especially, because of the perfect size,”
said Mr. Kanchit, showing a picture on his phone of a bull elephant mounting a
Mercedes-Benz.
Last October, the first sign of trouble came when, amid
unusually late monsoonal downpours, a panicked trumpeting echoed from the Haew
Narok waterfall. The name means Hell’s Ravine. Floods made reaching the area
impossible but some of the rangers had a hunch about what had happened. Every
year, one or two elephants die in the fierce currents, they said. And in 1992,
a baby slipped and seven others followed to try to rescue it. All eight died.
This time around, a baby elephant, around 3 years old,
slipped trying to cross the river and plunged nearly 200 feet to the second
tier of the waterfall. One after another, members of the herd tried to save the
calf.
The only elephants in the group that did not jump in were
another baby and its mother.
The panicked cries eventually quieted, and the rains stopped.
But floodwaters still impeded the rangers. Days later, they found six bodies.
Days after that, a drone located five more.
“The deaths of the 11 elephants were preventable and the
mismanagement by the park was preventable,” said Kemthong Morat, a prominent
Thai conservationist who went on a hunger strike to bring attention to their
safety. “They seem to forget that the national park’s purpose is for research
and conservation. Khao Yai’s big tourism revenues made them forget the main
purpose of the park.”
Mr. Kanchit, the former park director, disagreed.
“The environmental groups say that we focus too much on
tourists, not on the elephants, but we need a balance,” he said. “We also have
to take care of the people who love wildlife and want to enjoy unspoiled
nature.”
As for the coronavirus lockdown bringing new life to Khao
Yai, Mr. Kanchit said that the area where tourists roam constitutes only 0.1
percent of the park.
“These wild animals are coming out and walking around, which
we never saw before,” he said. “I would not dispute that.”
But, he added, “What is happening in the areas of the forest
that we humans never touch? Are they not rejuvenating naturally?”
When Khao Yai is open, the parking lots and outdoor canteens
are often crowded with sambar deer foraging through piles of candy wrappers and
discarded juice boxes.
The park’s official Facebook account has celebrated how
otters have returned to sunbathe in the river and chipmunk pups to gambol in
the branches. The shy serow, which resembles a missing link between a goat and
an antelope, is scampering through meadows, as is the dhole, a springy Asian
wild dog.
With few cars around, the elephants, the park’s dominant
species, stroll the roads, chomping on foliage without needing to retreat to
dangerous corners of the forest where cliffs meet waterfalls.
“We should consider if we should close down the park every
year,” said Ms. Chananya, the national park veterinarian. “Nature can restore
itself to its fullest.”
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