At the end of World War II, there was a series of attempts to establish national parks in Thailand, some of which were successful. These attempts were made following the rapid growth in population, which created economic pressure. Wildlife habitats were turned into human settlements and farm land. Fertile forests were encroached upon, cleared and afterwards abandoned, left to become derelict old clearings and degraded forests.
Wildlife was hunted for sale and for consumption. Some species came to the brink of extinction, while others disappeared forever. For these reasons, the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation proposed that the government establish a number of forests as national parks. A lack of funds and competent personnel to successfully carry out this task meant those forests could only be declared as Forest Park. However, these were the ùseedsû of the national parks of today. In the meantime, legislation was proposed to conserve and protect nature and natural resources through the declaration of national parks. His Majesty the King gave royal assent by signing the National Park Act B.E. 2504 (1961) on 22nd September 1961.
According to the Act, a national park is defined as land, which includes mountains, creeks, swamps, canals, marshs, basins, waterways, lakes, islands and seashores which have been designated as national park areas. Those lands should include interesting scenery, and should not be private property legally owned by a person who is not a government entity. This is to keep such land in its original state, preserved for the education and recreation of the people.
On 18th September 1962, Khao Yai National Park was established as the first national park in Thailand, covering an area of 2,165.55 sq. km. in Nakhon Ratchasima, Prachin Buri, Nakhon Nayok and Saraburi provinces. From the time Khao Yai was established to the present. Currently, Thailand has a total of 147 national parks of which 127 parks have already been gazetted and 20 sites are in the process of being established, covering an area of 70,038.65 square kilometers or 13.64 percent of the total land
area of the country.
Produced by
National Park Office
Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation
61 Phahonyothin Rd., Chatuchak,
Bangkok 10900
Advisors
Nipon Chotibal
Thanya Netithammakun
Sommai Kittayakul
Adisorn Noochdumrong
Samak Donnapee
Tanasart Wiengsarawin
Editorial Staffs
Vasa Sutthipibul
Kruawan Rungsipanich
Piyarat Chimchome
Photographer
Duangdao Suwunarungsi, Surajit Jamonmarn, Nopphadol Kunbua,
Skolphan Tiphanan, Chanasak Chumnumwan, Montri Sri O Pas,
Baramee Taemboonkiat, Wichai Puchaneeyangkoon, Kampol Sukhumalind,
Suvimol Srisantisuk, Phikul Choosakul, Prasong Kraisakdawat, Thawat Tanhai,
Thanakorn Hongphan, Suchitt Waipea, Jamikorn Sooktaramorn
Nature Explorer and Nature Tree
评分
评分
评分
评分
我之前尝试过几本介绍东南亚自然保护区的书籍,它们往往要么是面向专业研究人员的学术专著,要么就是只关注旅游热门点的肤浅小册子。而《泰国国家公园》的独特之处在于,它成功地架设起了一座桥梁,连接了学术的严谨与大众的可及性。书中对国家公园管理机构的运作模式、面临的预算压力以及国际合作项目的介绍,为我理解当代亚洲的自然保护事业提供了宝贵的宏观视角。例如,它详细比较了泰国与邻国在野生动物走廊建设方面的策略差异和效果评估,这让我深思。更令人耳目一新的是,它没有将国家公园描绘成与世隔绝的“绿色飞地”,而是探讨了它们如何与周边的农业、旅游业相互影响。书中附带的一个专门章节,列举了识别常见动物足迹和鸟类叫声的入门指南,这些小窍门非常实用,让我在公园里不再只是一个旁观者,而是有了一套基础的“阅读”自然环境的工具。总而言之,这本书不仅满足了我对异域风光的向往,更重要的是,它培养了我以更深层次、更具批判性的眼光去审视和欣赏我们赖以生存的自然环境。
评分说实话,我本来以为这又是一本徒有其表的“咖啡桌读物”,那些精美的照片或许能骗骗眼球,但内容肯定空洞乏味。然而,翻开这本书的第三部分——关于泰国湾及安达曼海域海洋公园的章节后,我的看法彻底颠覆了。作者似乎拥有潜水员的直觉和地质学家的知识,对普吉岛周边以及斯米兰群岛水下生态的描述,细致到令人咋舌。他不仅描绘了蝠鲱鱼迁徙的壮丽场面,还详细解释了珊瑚礁白化现象的区域性差异,以及不同潜水点对特定海龟物种的重要性。这种将旅游信息、科学观察和环境保护呼吁无缝融合的叙事手法,使得阅读过程充满了智力上的愉悦。我特别喜欢其中穿插的几个“本地故事”板块,比如一位老渔民如何目睹了过度捕捞对当地生态的毁灭性影响,这些第一人称的叙述,比任何官方报告都更有力量,它瞬间拉近了读者与遥远海域的距离。如果你打算去泰国海岛,并且希望你的行程不仅仅是躺在沙滩上晒太阳,而是想真正了解那片蔚蓝之下的复杂生命网络,那么这本书的海洋篇幅绝对是无价之宝。它成功地将枯燥的海洋生物学知识,转化成了引人入胜的探险故事。
评分这本关于泰国国家公园的指南,简直是为我量身定做的旅行宝典!我一直梦想着探索暹罗湾畔那些隐藏的自然奇观,但市面上的旅游书籍要么过于侧重曼谷的繁华,要么就是走马观花式的景点罗列。这本书的深度实在令人惊喜。光是阅读前几章对泰国生物多样性的宏观介绍,我就能感受到作者倾注的热情和严谨的学术态度。它不仅仅告诉你“这里有老虎和犀牛”,而是深入探讨了特定地理区域如何孕育出如此独特的生态系统,比如泰北山区的季风林与南部岛屿的热带雨林之间的细微差别。我尤其欣赏它对于当地土著社区与自然保护区之间复杂关系的探讨。书中没有回避环保行动中可能遇到的社会经济挑战,而是提供了一种更为 nuanced(细致入微)的视角,让我对未来每一次徒步旅行都抱有一种更负责任的态度。装帧设计也十分考究,那几页手绘的植物图谱简直可以拿来做艺术品收藏,色彩的饱和度和细节的精准度,让人仿佛能闻到清晨雨林中泥土和湿润植被的气息。对于计划进行多日深度探险的读者来说,关于露营装备选择、最佳季节性天气变化以及当地向导推荐的实用信息,更是无可替代的宝贵资源。这本书远超出了普通旅游指南的范畴,它更像是一本献给自然爱好者的情书,充满了对这片土地的敬畏与深爱。
评分我必须承认,在打开这本书之前,我对泰国北部,尤其是清迈周边那些人迹罕至的山地国家公园知之甚少。我的印象还停留在“大象和少数民族村落”的刻板印象中。这本书的“北部山脉探秘”部分,彻底颠覆了我的认知地图。它对多伊素贴-普因国家公园和卡槟山国家公园的描述,充满了对高海拔气候和独特植物群落的深入剖析。令人印象深刻的是,作者并未满足于仅仅列出徒步路线,而是提供了一份详尽的“海拔生态带变迁图谱”,清晰地展示了从山脚到山顶植被是如何一步步演变的——从阔叶林到山地云雾林,每上升一百米,你看到的物种都有哪些变化。这对于热衷于自然摄影和植物观察的读者来说,简直是天堂。更妙的是,书中还收录了若干条关于“消失的步道”的考察记录,这些路线可能因为季节性泥石流或保护政策已经不再对公众开放,但通过文字和老照片的重建,我仿佛也跟随探险家们走过了一趟充满挑战的史前路径。这种对历史和地理变迁的追溯,让这本书的厚度瞬间增加了一个维度,它不再是关于“现在”的指南,而是关于“过去如何塑造现在”的深度报告。
评分这本书的编辑和排版工艺,绝对值得单独拿出来称赞一番,它的制作水准完全达到了国际顶尖自然历史出版物的标准。我拿起这本书时,首先被它所采用的纸张质感所吸引——那种略带粗砺感但又完全不影响照片清晰度的哑光铜版纸,非常适合在户外强光下阅读,而且不易留下指纹。地图设计是本书的另一个亮点,它们不是那种标准的、以公路为中心的地图,而是以等高线和水文系统为核心的生态地图。每张地图都清晰地标注了植被覆盖率的热力图和主要动物活动区域的概率分布,这对于规划实地观察活动至关重要。我尤其欣赏它在版面设计上所展现出的克制美学——大量留白的设计,让文字和图片之间有了呼吸的空间,避免了信息过载带来的阅读疲劳。此外,作者对一些罕见动植物的描述,所引用的科学文献和民间传说之间的平衡拿捏得恰到好处,既保证了科学的严谨性,又不失叙事的趣味性,让即便是对生物学不太了解的普通读者也能轻松进入状态。这绝对是一本值得珍藏和反复阅读的艺术品。
评分争取一一走过!
评分争取一一走过!
评分争取一一走过!
评分争取一一走过!
评分争取一一走过!
本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有