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Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
A staff of the Tram Chim National Park watches sarus cranes via cameras. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
The area for raising sarus cranes at the Tram Chim National Park. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
Sarus cranes are raised at the Tram Chim National Park. VNA/Photo by courtesy
Sarus cranes are raised at the Tram Chim National Park. VNA/Photo by courtesy
VNA Photos
Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
5 hours ago
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TTXVN
Five sarus cranes transferred from Thailand to the Tram Chim National Park in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap in April 2025 remained healthy and adapted well to local climate conditions, habitat and food sources. The birds have since formed breeding pairs and are expected to reproduce in the near future. They are the first cranes brought from Thailand under the two countries' sarus crane conservation and development cooperation programme. Dong Thap projects to receive, raise and gradually reintroduce 100 sarus cranes into the wild during the period from 2022 to 2032, including 60 birds transferred from Thailand. The province expects at least half of those released to survive, reproduce and establish a sustainable wild population. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
Five sarus cranes transferred from Thailand to the Tram Chim National Park in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap in April 2025 remained healthy and adapted well to local climate conditions, habitat and food sources. The birds have since formed breeding pairs and are expected to reproduce in the near future. They are the first cranes brought from Thailand under the two countries' sarus crane conservation and development cooperation programme. Dong Thap projects to receive, raise and gradually reintroduce 100 sarus cranes into the wild during the period from 2022 to 2032, including 60 birds transferred from Thailand. The province expects at least half of those released to survive, reproduce and establish a sustainable wild population. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
Five sarus cranes transferred from Thailand to the Tram Chim National Park in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap in April 2025 remained healthy and adapted well to local climate conditions, habitat and food sources. The birds have since formed breeding pairs and are expected to reproduce in the near future. They are the first cranes brought from Thailand under the two countries' sarus crane conservation and development cooperation programme. Dong Thap projects to receive, raise and gradually reintroduce 100 sarus cranes into the wild during the period from 2022 to 2032, including 60 birds transferred from Thailand. The province expects at least half of those released to survive, reproduce and establish a sustainable wild population. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
Five sarus cranes transferred from Thailand to the Tram Chim National Park in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap in April 2025 remained healthy and adapted well to local climate conditions, habitat and food sources. The birds have since formed breeding pairs and are expected to reproduce in the near future. They are the first cranes brought from Thailand under the two countries' sarus crane conservation and development cooperation programme. Dong Thap projects to receive, raise and gradually reintroduce 100 sarus cranes into the wild during the period from 2022 to 2032, including 60 birds transferred from Thailand. The province expects at least half of those released to survive, reproduce and establish a sustainable wild population. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
Sarus cranes raised at Tram Chim National Park
Five sarus cranes transferred from Thailand to the Tram Chim National Park in the Mekong Delta province of Dong Thap in April 2025 remained healthy and adapted well to local climate conditions, habitat and food sources. The birds have since formed breeding pairs and are expected to reproduce in the near future. They are the first cranes brought from Thailand under the two countries' sarus crane conservation and development cooperation programme. Dong Thap projects to receive, raise and gradually reintroduce 100 sarus cranes into the wild during the period from 2022 to 2032, including 60 birds transferred from Thailand. The province expects at least half of those released to survive, reproduce and establish a sustainable wild population. VNA Photo: Nhựt An
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