Rare wild cattle herded in Cambodia by helicopter

Banteng are a type of wild cattle listed as critically endangered on Nature's Red List of threatened species

By
AFP
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This handout photo taken on May 14, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows an adult banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, during a herding operation to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP
This handout photo taken on May 14, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows an adult banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, during a herding operation to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP

A helicopter successfully herded 16 critically endangered banteng onto a truck in Cambodia for the first time, conservationists said, marking a "significant achievement" in a country with high rates of deforestation.

Banteng are a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia and listed as critically endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of threatened species.

Their natural habitat is forests and grasslands, but only a few thousand remain in the wild and they are mostly threatened by hunting, logging and industry.

This handout photo taken on May 15, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows a helicopter during an operation to herd banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, as part of efforts to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP
This handout photo taken on May 15, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows a helicopter during an operation to herd banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, as part of efforts to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP 

Cambodia has lost around 33 percent of its tree cover since 2000, according to Global Forest Watch, as the government allows firms to clear vast tracts of land — including in protected zones.

Conservation groups Rising Phoenix and Siem Pang said that 16 banteng found in the wild were herded over three days last week through a "mass-capture funnel trap" onto a truck before being relocated to a wildlife sanctuary.

For the first time, a helicopter was used to guide them through the funnel.

This handout photo taken on May 13, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, during a herding operation to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP
This handout photo taken on May 13, 2025 and released on May 23 by conservation group Rising Phoenix shows banteng, a type of wild cattle native to Southeast Asia, in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia, during a herding operation to relocate members of the endangered species. — AFP 

The operation took place in Siem Pang in northeastern Cambodia.

The conservation groups said that the method "opens the way for further such operations to relocate Banteng trapped in isolated forest patches elsewhere in the country".

They added that the banteng will be monitored and protected at the Siem Pang Wildlife Sanctuary.