| Nature
& Environment
Thailand shares borders with Malaysia,
Myanmar (Burma), Laos and Cambodia. The country's east coast borders the
Gulf of Thailand and the west coast abuts the Andaman Sea. The country is
divided into four main zones: the fertile, central plains of the Chao
Phraya River; the poorer region of the 300m (985ft) high northeast
plateau; the fertile valley and mountains of Northern Thailand; and the
rainforested southern peninsula. The highest peak is the 2596m (8512ft)
Doi Inthanon in Chiang Mai province.
A quarter of Thailand is
covered by monsoon forest or rainforest, and the country has an incredible
array of fruit trees, bamboo and tropical hardwoods. There are 66 national
parks and 32 wildlife sanctuaries, covering 11 per cent of the country.
They contain more than 850 resident and migratory species of birds and
dwindling numbers of tigers, leopards, elephants and Asiatic black bears.
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| Unfortunately, attempts to stop the logging of rainforests and illegal
trafficking in endangered species are fighting an uphill battle against
corruption, officials only too happy to make a buck on the side, and
tourists packing an exotica or two down their dacks as they walk through
customs. The tiger, for instance, is one of the most endangered of
Thailand's mammals but the market for tiger organs, particularly in China,
is so lucrative that poaching is still a viable career option.
Overdevelopment on Ko Phi Phi is starving the
coral reefs of sunlight and smothering the surface in pollutants: the
destruction of the reef is a micro-example of the problems occuring on a
national scale, with the finger being pointed in the direction of tourism.
In May 1999, protestors packed the beach where the filming of 'The Beach'
was taking place: environmentalists were concerned that filming would
destroy the delicate eco-balance of the beach. Ironically, the film was
about the destruction of native cultures and environments by hordes of
dropped-out, alternative life-seeking backpackers (curiously, the
filmmakers were silent on the issue of hordes of filmmakers destroying
delicate eco-balances). One of the main culprits according to the Alex
Garland, author of the best selling novel, is Lonely Planet.
Thailand's climate is ruled by monsoons that
produce three seaons in northern, northeastern and central Thailand and
two in southern Thailand. Generally the 'dry and wet monsoon climate'
arrives sometime between May and July and lasts into November. It is
followed by a dry season from November to May in which temperatures are
relatively lower until February and then begin to soar from March to May. |