Local application of the biosphere reserve concept in Kien Giang, Vietnam was examined to see how it compared with other biosphere reserves both in Vietnam and internationally and from that to assess the level of adoption and what could be limiting processes. This was undertaken mainly through qualitative document analysis, field surveys, and extensive interviews of stakeholders. While the designation the Kien Giang Biosphere Reserve and establishment of the management regulation conformed with the conceptual model and criteria outlined by UNESCO, the practical implementation has been inadequate to achieve the desired outcomes of the biosphere reserve concept. There was limited public awareness and understanding of the biosphere reserve approach because of poorly developed communication channels. Top-down, state-control based on a strong sectoral approach to biosphere reserve planning and management hindered stakeholder and community participation. Weak engagement from the Province as the designated lead agency in biosphere reserve governance limited cross-sectoral collaboration in the delivery of the biosphere reserve mandated functions. External projects were perceived by community stakeholders to have only a temporary impact on biosphere reserve operation because of their small, short-term scale with the project maintaining control over funding and design of individual activities. Without proper investment in public awareness and improvement of Biosphere Reserve governance leadership, the desire for development of strategic public-private partnerships to support implementation remains unfulfilled and the Biosphere Reserve model will, as a consequence, contribute little to the long-term biodiversity conservation and socio-economic development in the region.
U Minh Thuong National Park, one of the two largest remaining peat swamp, melaleuca forests in Viet Nam is a very Important Bird and Conservation Area because of its diverse wetland habitats. A devastating forest fire in 2002 resulted in a new regime of fire control based on an imposed permanent flooding regime over large areas of the Park that led to severe wetland and forest degradation. This in turn negatively impacted on bird species diversity and populations. In 2009, the Government of Viet Nam and the park authority adopted an improved water management practice. A survey four years later recorded two new species in the list of 159 bird species for the park. Of these, 25 threatened species were using the wetland park and adjacent Buffer Zone for living and feeding habitat. Based on the largest count occurring during three continuous days, the water bird population in the bird colony in 2013 increased by 33 per cent compared to the 2009 level. The positive response of avifauna to the changes in U Minh Thuong with respect to the hydrology of seasonally flooded melaleuca wetland forest indicates the need to understand how the 'normal' wetland processes operate in support of biodiversity conservation before modifying them for fire management.
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