Deadly storm creates new Garden of Eden for wildlife

Updated: 2009-11-05 08:28

(HK Edition)

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Deadly storm creates new Garden of Eden for wildlife

TAIPEI: For all the devastation and tragedy it wrought, Typhoon Morakot has created a wildlife paradise, for wildlife, in an area next to Jiaming Lake in eastern Taiwan.

"With historical hiking trails leading to Siangyang and Jiaming Lake seriously damaged, hikers disappeared, allowing many endemic animal species to reclaim their lost territory," said Huang Chun-tse, a section chief at the Taitung branch office of the Forest Bureau under the Cabinet-level Council of Agriculture.

Hiking trails to the area were all but destroyed around the scenic mountain lake by the storm.

Extreme torrential rains brought by Typhoon Morakot triggered landslides in many of Taiwan's mountain regions, including the Siangyang National Forest Recreation Area in Yushan National Park where the high-altitude Jiaming Lake is situated.

While examining typhoon damage along a major hiking trail, Huang said he was amazed to have seen several Formosan salamanders - a top-grade protected species native to Taiwan. The creatures live at elevations above 2,000 meters - in the Siangyang refuge cottage.

Walking deeper into the mountain, Huang said he and his colleagues were in for even more surprises.

Deadly storm creates new Garden of Eden for wildlife

"We came across many other protected animal species that have not been seen in the region since Jiaming Lake became a new popular hiking spot," Huang said.

Among the species spotted were Formosan yellow-throated martens, Formosan field mice and Formosan sambar deer.

Lin Ming-chuang, a forest ranger at the Siangyang work station, said the Siangyang-Jiaming area became inaccessible to hikers after Typhoon Morakot, allowing wild animals to return to their previous habitats.

"Hiking trails have again become paths used by wild animals," he said. "Without human interference, many Sambar deer now often loiter in the Siangyang Forest Recreation Area at night and yellow-throated martens also like to stroll along Siangyang-Jiaming hiking trails."

The absence of thousands of hikers that used to visit the area every weekend in previous years has helped restore the surrounding environment to a more pristine state, Lee observed.

"The damage to access roads may be a boon, allowing the region to take a rest and resume its function as a safe heaven for wild animals," he said.

At an elevation of 3,310 meters and measuring 120 meters long by 80 meters wide, the oval Jiaming Lake has become a favorite hiking spot in recent years because of its clear water and beautiful scenery.

China Daily/CNA

(HK Edition 11/05/2009 page2)