Snake cultivation threat to lakes
Snake cultivation threat to lakes
Bucketfuls of lifeless water snakes are tossed into algae-green pools and pits seething with crocodiles.

Prek Toal (Cambodia): Deep inside a flooded forest oozing with wildlife, Ly Vy pries another struggling creature from a gill net, whacks its head against the side of his skiff and adds it to a coiled heap that will add to the world's largest snake harvest.

A day later and across the Tonle Sap, the vast lake that is Cambodia's most vital ecosystem, it's not a very pretty sight.

Bucketfuls of lifeless water snakes are tossed into algae-green pools and pits seething with crocodiles, which gulp them down in a few power-packed bites.

Some of the farm's 2,000 crocs fall back into their almost continual sleep with bits of snake still dangling from their clamped jaws.

"They prefer snakes over fish. They have red blood and good protein," says Sen Rith, owner of one of Cambodia's 900 or so crocodile farms, which are growing increasingly dependent on snakes as stocks of fish are depleted in the Tonle Sap's once bountiful waters.

Researchers for the Wildlife Conservation Society estimate nearly 4 million snakes are plucked out each year, and fear that number can't sustain the snake population. That raises concerns among both the thousands who make their living off the catch and environmentalists monitoring the fragile and already battered lake.

"The snakes have got to be rated as forming one of the most important components of the ecology of the Tonle Sap," says Joe Walston, who heads the New York-based society's operation in Cambodia.

"They are an important predator, but also an important food source for large raptors, wild crocs (and other animals). If they were to decline the effects would be devastating on some of the world's most important colonies of water birds and other wildlife."

Ly Vy, who has been catching the nonpoisonous snakes for eight years, says there are far fewer these days, and worries both about future catches and possible government controls on the harvest.

This year, he has been catching about half the number over last season, which peaks between June and September.

During these months of the monsoons, he lives with his wife and two young boys aboard a cramped, open-decked 14.7-foot boat deep inside the humid, insect-ridden forest.

He and other snake hunters, among the nation's poorest folk, spend the rest of the year as fishermen on the lake in northwestern Cambodia.

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"During this season we can't catch a lot of fish so we try to catch a lot of snakes," the 26-year-old hunter says as he finishes the morning's inspection of his 437-yard net strung along a narrow water channel. The 50 animals collected, the endemic Tonle Sap water snake among them, will fetch him about $1, he says.

"It's difficult to live in the forest, but we have no choice. The children can't go to school, medical help is far away and the food is poor," says his wife, Hol Hong, noting that snake is on their menu day after day.

To a visitor, the family's environment seems anything but unpleasant.

Dozens of spot-billed pelicans, a species endangered around the globe, rise with powerful beats of wings, then skim gracefully over the water.

Gray-headed fishing eagles watch broodingly from treetops, while spear-sleek cormorants flap over muddy waters burbling with eggs, seeds, spores, larvae and hatchlings.

This unique ecosystem forms each year as the Tone Sap expands to five times its dry season size to flood tropical forests and farm land around Southeast Asia's largest lake and is the source of at least 60 percent of Cambodia's protein intake.

From this primordial incubator slither millions of water snakes from five species of the subfamily Homalopsinae.

Most of the catch goes to crocodile farms. Other snakes are turned into wallets, handbags and other luxury products.

Some are exported or sold locally to restaurants where they are fried, dried, boiled and curried, a pregnant female being considered a special delicacy.

"We do know that the intensity of the harvest is going up and the quantity of snakes being brought into the ports and markets is going down," says Walston, a wildlife biologist.

It's not certain whether a point of no return has already been reached, he says, but some species like the Bocourt's water snake, valued for both its skin and meat, are now rarely found.

Walton says it is essential to have tighter regulations that take into account both the livelihoods of the hunters and the lake ecology. The rules might include protected breeding areas and restrictions on how snakes are caught.

If fishing and snake hunting don't remain sustainable, impoverished lake dwellers will inevitably turn to cutting down the forest and competing for other already dwindling resources, he says — and Cambodia's greatest environmental battle will be lost.

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