Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary


Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary is a protected area in Myanmar's Mandalay Region, covering an area of and ranging in elevation from. It borders the Irrawaddy river close to Bagan and was established in 1995.

History

Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary was established in 1995 for the conservation of dry forest. It is managed by a warden, rangers and foresters, who patrol the area and implement measures to protect the forest against floods and fire.
In 2014, about 56,000 people visited the sanctuary.

Biodiversity

Flora

In 2015, 80 tree species, 160 species of medicinal plants, four bamboo species and 32 species of flowering plants were identified in Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary.
The forest type is dry deciduous forest. The tree species include Teak, Pterocarpus macrocarpus, Xylia dolabriformis, and Shorea siamensis.

Fauna

Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary harbours sambar deer, Indian muntjac, Indian hog deer, Eld's deer and Burmese star tortoise.

Threats

Lawkananda Wildlife Sanctuary's habitat is threatened by illicit logging, hunting and fishing of wildlife, fires during the dry season, extraction of water, fuel wood, grass and non-timber forest products.