In northern Sumatra, straddling
the border of the provinces of North Sumatra
and Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam, and covering 1,094,692 hectares (ha), lies the
Gunung Leuser National Park (GLNP).
Established in 1980, the park
takes its name from Maount Leuser whose peak stretches to 3,404 m above see
level. Together with Bukit Barisan Selatan and Kerinci Seblat
National Parks , it forms
the Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra UNESCO World Heritage Site
(inscribed in 2004). Leuser was also declared by UNESCO as a biosphere reserve
in 1980, and by ASEAN Secretarial as ASEAN
Heritage Park
in 1984.
The GLNP is located within the
2.6 million ha Leuser Ecosystem (LE) and is the last place where potentially
viable populations of Sumatran elephants, orangutans, tigers, and rhinos exist
and the only place in natural world where they are found together. The LE
represents a complex, amazingly diverse, but above all, fargile habitat. There
exists a wide ranging, delicately balanced network of animal and plant species,
of which just a selection of them are introduced in this article.
Tangkahan, referred to as the
hidden paradise of Gunung Leuser National Park, is an ecotourism area in the
Langkat district of North Sumatra, just 2 (two) hours drive from the
neighboring ecotourism site of Bukit Lawang or 3 (three) hours drive from
Medan.
In the 1980s and 1990s, local
people were actively cutting down trees illegaly from the park for commercial
timber. However, after a time the people became aware of the damages wrought by
such activity and the errors of their ways, and thus collectively decided to
stop illegal logging and transform the area into an ecotourism destination.
Thus in April 2001, the residents gathered and passed local regulations
prohibiting illegal exploitation of the forest and established the Tangkahan
Tourism Institute (Lembaga Pariwisata Tangkahan).
Lembaga Pariwisata Tangkahan established an MoU with GLNP Management in April 2002 to manage the Tangkahan forest for ecotourism purposes. LPT developed the Community Tour Operator (CTO) system which provides accomodation and local tour guides for visitors. In addition to amazing GLNP forest trekking in the area, Tangkahan is also the base of the Conservation Response Unit (CRU), consisting of a team of ex-captive Sumatran elephants and their mahouts (elephant tenders) that regularly patrols the national park to protect from any possible encroachment. Visitors can also do elephant jungle trekking for one or two hours by joining the mahouts atop an elephant's back for a stroll through the forest, or enjoy four days three nights elephant jungle trekking from Tangkahan to Bukit Lawang.
Lembaga Pariwisata Tangkahan established an MoU with GLNP Management in April 2002 to manage the Tangkahan forest for ecotourism purposes. LPT developed the Community Tour Operator (CTO) system which provides accomodation and local tour guides for visitors. In addition to amazing GLNP forest trekking in the area, Tangkahan is also the base of the Conservation Response Unit (CRU), consisting of a team of ex-captive Sumatran elephants and their mahouts (elephant tenders) that regularly patrols the national park to protect from any possible encroachment. Visitors can also do elephant jungle trekking for one or two hours by joining the mahouts atop an elephant's back for a stroll through the forest, or enjoy four days three nights elephant jungle trekking from Tangkahan to Bukit Lawang.