Crowdfunding brings life-saving water to Myanmar’s deer

This photo taken on May 6, 2019 shows an Eld’s deer resting in the Shwe Settaw nature reserve in Magway region. – A herd of endangered deer wait in the shade of one of the sparse trees punctuating the parched landscape in Myanmar, watching rangers dispatch water to keep them alive – funded by well-wishers from across the country. (Photo by Ye Aung THU / AFP)
This photo taken on May 6, 2019 shows an Eld’s deer resting in the Shwe Settaw nature reserve in Magway region. – A herd of endangered deer wait in the shade of one of the sparse trees punctuating the parched landscape in Myanmar, watching rangers dispatch water to keep them alive – funded by well-wishers from across the country. (Photo by Ye Aung THU / AFP)

A herd of endangered deer wait under the shade of one of the sparse trees in this parched central Myanmar landscape, watching as rangers dispatch drinking water — a life-saving resource funded by wellwishers across the country.

Shwe Settaw nature reserve in Magway Division is home to the endemic species of Eld’s or golden deer. But their habitat lies in the country’s central dry zone, a low-lying plain astride the Irrawaddy River where water shortages are rife in the hot season.

This year temperatures have soared to a record 47 degrees centigrade.

The sanctuary’s 20-odd lakes and ponds — a lifeline for the deer, wild boar, jackals, peacocks and other creatures — have all dried up.

In one lake bed, a water depth-measuring rod stands marooned in the middle of a mosaic of cracked, arid earth.

Many of the park’s estimated 1,000 deer started venturing dangerously close to villages outside the reserve, putting themselves at risk of poaching, rangers say.

At the end of April, the park’s dozen rangers started pooling their money to travel to a nearby river to collect water and re-fill a couple of the scorched craters.

But after realising this was unsustainable they turned to Facebook for help.

– People vs nature –

Donations poured in from as far away as Yangon, Mandalay and Shan state in the northeast.

“Luckily, it really captured people’s interest,” ranger Thein Lwin tells AFP with a smile, adding that within a few days they had received over 1 million kyat ($650).

The sum is enough to pay for the petrol and fees needed to hire water-carrying tankers that take six daily trips to a small river some 15 kilometres away. Each tanker holds around 4,500 litres of water.

They have even stopped accepting money on the assumption the fund will see them through to the monsoon season in the coming weeks.

In another section of the reserve, a breeding programme for the critically endangered Burmese star tortoise faces similar problems.

“We lost some tortoises because of the extreme heat,” says Steve Platt, a herpetologist with the World Conservation Society (WCS).

“That doesn’t happen every year. Three or four — we just found them dead,” he says.

But the plight of the park’s fauna will not end when the rains arrive.

The sanctuary is the centre of an ongoing conflict between conservationists and local people, some of Myanmar’s poorest.

Around 40 villages lie close to the reserve — most without electricity — and many people enter to search for firewood.

Poaching is also a huge problem in a country where the illegal trade of wildlife parts flourishes, due largely to the insatiable appetite from neighbouring China.

“We need more guard posts and more staff,” the ranger says with a sigh. “The deer’s future is at stake.”

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