Indochina Adventures provides professional bird watching tour accompanied by experienced bird watching guide with bird list. Prek Toal is one of the biggest bird sanctuary: Milky Stork (10 pairs), Painted Stork (100 pairs), Asian Open Bill (1500 pairs), Lesser Adjutant (40 pairs), Greater Adjutant (30 pairs), Spot-billed Pelicans (700 pairs), Black-head Ibis (200 pairs), Glossy Ibis (50 pairs), Grey-head Fish-Eagle (15 pairs), Masked Fin-foot (10 pairs). A full day boat trip is recommended. Ang Trapeng Thmor is the best place for watching Sarus Crane. Tmart Boey is the north plain village for Ibis. Surrounding the Tonle Sap Great Lake are natural grasslands, which flood annually with the rise and fall of the Mekong river. This unique habitat is highly threatened by conversion to agriculture. It also supports globally significant breeding populations of the endangered Bengal Florican – the only such site in South-east Asia. Other birds present include several large waterbird species, wintering Manchurian Reed Warblers and Greater Spotted Eagles, and Oriental Plovers, which are reliable passage migrants in March. |
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Full Day
Prek Toal Bird Sanctuary: Milky Stork, Painted Stork, Asian Open Bill, Lesser Adjutant, Greater Adjutant, Spot-billed Pelicans, Black-head Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Grey-head Fish-Eagle, Masked Fin-foot. >> Learn More |
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Full Day
Ang Trapeang Thmor: important wintering site for the endangered Eastern Sarus Crane. Other highlights of Ang Trapeang Thmor: breeding colonies of Spot-billed Pelican and Painted Stork, often large numbers of waterfowl including Spot-billed Duck, Cotton Pygmy Goose, Garganey, Black-backed Swamphen, Pheasant-tailed and Bronze-winged Jacanas. >> Learn More |
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Full Day
Kampong Thom Grasslands: Bengal Florican – the only such site in South-east Asia. Other birds present include several large waterbird species, wintering Manchurian Reed Warblers and Greater Spotted Eagles, and Oriental Plovers, which are reliable passage migrants in March. >> Learn More |
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3 Days
The Tmatboey Ibis Project aims to conserve some of South-east Asia’s rarest species by directly linking revenue from bird-watching tourism to maintenance of species’ populations. The site supports globally important breeding populations of two Critically Endangered Ibis species. >> Learn More
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