Misplaced Pages

Doi Khun Tan National Park

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
National park of Thailand
Doi Khun Than National Park
IUCN category II (national park)
At Doi Khun Tan peak
Map showing the location of Doi Khun Than National ParkMap showing the location of Doi Khun Than National ParkLocation within Thailand
LocationThailand
Nearest cityLampang
Coordinates18°28′15″N 99°17′5″E / 18.47083°N 99.28472°E / 18.47083; 99.28472
Area255 km (98 sq mi)
Established1975

Doi Khun Tan National Park (Thai: อุทยานแห่งชาติดอยขุนตาล) straddles the mountainous area of the Khun Tan Range in Lamphun and Lampang Provinces, northern Thailand.

Established in 1975 as Thailand's tenth national park, it is an IUCN Category V protected area measuring 159,556 rai ~ 255 square kilometres (98 sq mi). The park ranges in elevation from 325–1,373 m.

Its best known feature is Thailand's longest railroad tunnel, 1,352 m long.

Climate

The three basic seasons are summer, from March–June; rainy season, from July–October; and winter, from November–February. The temperature varies from 38 degrees Celsius during the hot season to as cold as 5 degrees Celsius. Rainfall, which falls mostly during the rainy season, averages about 1,034 mm per year.

Flora and fauna

Human encroachment has disturbed the forests of Doi Khun Tan and they have changed dramatically in the past century. The forests can be divided into three types, with distinct elevation ranges.

Lowland elevations (325–850 m). Originally a teak forest, lower elevations are composed of a degraded, mixed bamboo deciduous forest and deciduous Dipterocarp-oak forest.

Middle elevations (850-1,000 meter). This is a transitional area where the lowland deciduous forest and upland evergreen-pine forest mix to form a mixed evergreen and deciduous forest. There are only two species of pine trees in Thailand, a two–needle pine (Pinus latteri) and three-needle pine (Pinus kesiya), both of which can be found here.

Upland elevations (1,000-1,373 m). The forest here is composed mostly of evergreen hardwood trees and a minority of pine (Pinus latteri) to form an evergreen-pine forest. Much of the forest and watershed on the west side of the national park has been ravaged. More pristine conditions are found on the east side.

Doi Khun Tan offers year-round viewing of wild-flowers such as orchids and gingers. Doi Khun Tan is botanically very diverse, home to over 1,300 different vascular species. Numerous edible fungi are found in the park.

Some wildlife still exists in Doi Khun Tan, including the Siamese hare, porcupine, wild chicken, wild boar and weasel, as a variety of birds, reptiles, spiders and insects. The effects of hunting, logging, frequent fires, and human encroachment have greatly reduced their numbers. In the past, gibbons, tiger, elephants, bears, wild cattle, serow, slow loris, barking deer and many other species were also residents of Doi Khun Tan. Now they are all gone.

Location

Doi Khun Tan National Park in overview PARO 13 (Lampang branch)  
    3) Doi Khun Tan National Park in overview PARO 13 (Lampang branch)
  National park
1 Chae Son
2 Doi Chong
3 Doi Khun Tan
4 Khelang Banphot
5 Mae Wa
6 Tham Pha Thai
  Wildlife sanctuary
7 Doi Pha Mueang
  
  Non-hunting area
8 Doi Phra Bat
9 Mae Mai
  Forest park
10 Mon Phraya Chae

See also

References

  1. World Conservation Monitoring Centre; IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre; IUCN Commission on National Parks and Protected Areas (November 1990). 1990 United Nations list of national parks and protected areas. IUCN. pp. 170–. ISBN 978-2-8317-0032-8. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  2. ^ "Doi Khun Tan National Park". Department of National Parks (Thailand). Archived from the original on 25 November 2015. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
  3. Elliot, Stephan; Cubitt, Gerald (2001). THE NATIONAL PARKS and other Wild Places of THAILAND. New Holland Publishers (UK) Ltd. pp. 68–71. ISBN 9781859748862.

External links

National parks, forest parks and wetlands in Thailand
National parks
Marine national parks
Forest parks
Wetlands


Stub icon

This protected areas-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Stub icon

This Thailand location article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: