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There is also a Thai idiom bon meuan mi kin pheung (Thai: บ่นเหมือนหมีกินผึ้ง), literally "grumbling like a bear eating honey", referring to people who display behaviors of grumbling and mumbling express dissatisfaction. This idiom comes from the behavior of this species of bear when it climbs trees in ...
A leopard cat A dhole, an Asiatic wild dog An Asiatic golden cat Bryde's whale in the Gulf of Thailand. There are 264 mammal species in Thailand on the IUCN Red List. Of these species, three are critically endangered, 24 are vulnerable, and two are near-threatened. One of the species listed for Thailand is considered to be extinct. [1]
Thai horseshoe bat: Rhinolophus siamensis Gyldenstolpe, 1917: Caves & evergreen forests LC Unknown: Lesser brown horseshoe bat: Rhinolophus stheno K. Andersen, 1905: Forest LC: Thailand horseshoe bat: Rhinolophus thailandensis Wu, Harada & Motokawa, 2009: Caves & forest LC: Thomas's horseshoe bat: Rhinolophus thomasi K. Andersen, 1905: Caves ...
Zookeepers have introduced a sun bear cub to the public at a zoo in northeast Thailand. Footage shows the adorable baby bear stumbling around as it explored its enclosure at the Nakhon Ratchasima Zoo.
The sun bear (Helarctos malayanus) is a bear species in the family Ursidae found in the tropical forests of Southeast Asia.It is the only species in the genus Helarctos [5] and the smallest bear species, standing nearly 70 cm (28 in) at the shoulder and weighing 25–65 kg (55–143 lb).
There are 3,000 species of plants, 320 species of birds such as red junglefowl and coral-billed ground cuckoo, and 66 species of mammals, including Asian black bear, Indian elephant, gaur, gibbon, Indian sambar deer, southern pig-tailed macaque, Indian muntjac, Ussuri dhole and wild pigs. There have been no tigers in Khao Yai for at least 20 years.
The US Commerce Department presented evidence in 2023 that Chinese solar panel manufacturers had shifted their assembly operations to countries such as Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam and ...
The Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI) calculates that each forest staffer needs to police 2,083 rai (3.333 km 2). In Thailand overall there are 443 protected forest zones totalling 66.3 million rai (106,100 km 2), or 20.68 percent of the country's total area. The government allocates a budget of around 61 baht per rai to manage them.