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Boxing Title Fight To Raise Funds For Phuket Sea Turtle Research


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Boxing title fight to raise funds for Phuket sea turtle research

Phuket Gazette

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GLOVES OFF: (From left) Vice Admiral Taratorn Kajitsuwan of the Royal Thai Navy Third Area Command, Government Spokesman Prompong Nopparit and Phuket Governor Tri Augkaradacha pose to promote the upcoming title fight. Photo: Atchaa Khamlo

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Kongkiat Kittiwattanawong, head of the Marine Endangered Species Unit at the Phuket Marine Biological Center, wants more turtles ‘chipped’ so his team can track turtle progress. Photo: Atchaa Khamlo

PHUKET: -- A World Boxing Organization (WBO) title fight will take place at Nai Yang Beach next month to raise funds for sea turtle preservation projects in Phuket and other provinces along the Andaman coast.

Phuket Governor Tri Augkaradacha, Government Spokesman Prompong Nopparit and other dignitaries announced the five-bout card that will take place in Sakoo on July 6.

The two-hour event will be televised nationally on Thai TV Channel 7 starting at 3pm.

The main event will pit renowned Thai boxer Pungluang Sor Singyu (41-1-0) in a WBO Oriental Bantamweight (118lb) title defense against Filipino journeyman Rey Migreno (16-20-3).

It will not be the first time the two have squared off in the ring. Pungluang Sor Singyu (real name Panya Utok) easily defeated the Filipino in a unanimous decision the last time they fought, just last month in Nakhon Ratchasima.

Phuket Gazette boxing contributor Scott Mallon said the result should not be taken as a foregone conclusion. Migreno is a somewhat inconsistent performer who is capable of bouncing back from defeat, he said.

The event, to be held on a specially-constructed ring at Nai Yang Beach from 3 to 5pm, is expected to raise 3 million baht. Admission, however, is free.

Proceeds are to go to several organizations running sea turtle preservation projects, including the Phuket Marine Biological Center (PMBC).

“According to research, the reduction in the sea turtle population and subsequent decrease in nesting activity is caused primarily by commercial fishing practices,” explained Kongkiat Kittiwattanawong, who heads the PMBC’s Marine Endangered Species Unit.

Traditionally, from 5,000 to 10,000 sea turtles once nested at sites on Andaman beaches. That number has now dwindled to just a few hundred. The trend indicates that sea turtles, many species of which are already listed as “highly endangered”, could be on the way to total extinction in local waters.

The PMBC plans to use the proceeds it receives from the event to expand its satellite tracking project, in which microchips are affixed to the turtles’ shells as a way of tracking their movements.

“Through this we will gain useful information to aid our preservation project,” Mr Kongkiat said.

“We have one 60-year-old female turtle named Mae Sri Nuan that has been wearing a chip for about three months now. We want to implant more turtles with chips, at a cost of about 5,500 baht per turtle,” he said.

The boxing event undercard is as follows:

Kwanchai 13 Coins Express v Phaitong Seuangsima (112lb)

Bualuang Kiattisombat v Singthong Kor Sonthong (126lb)

Buangen Kiattisombat v Nongbua Mor Burapha (112lb)

Buakaew Kiattisombat v Napaphon Superchamp (105lb)

Source: http://www.phuketgaz...ticle16209.html

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-- Phuket Gazette 2012-06-21

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All the tourist beaches, Kata, Karon, Patong etc used to be nesting grounds for several species of turtles. That ended with tourism. Drag-netting and crowded beaches have decimated the sea turtle populations here. There hasn't been a reported nesting for several years, and only a handful during the last decade. Those that did occasionally return to nest were lucky if locals didn't dig up the nests to sell the eggs.

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