Friday, 30 May 2008

BBC News : In pictures: Life on the lake

But hundreds of thousands of people depend on the fish in the lake to live - which is why properly managing its resources is so important.

Others are experimenting with new money-making projects, such as growing mushrooms inside their houses.

As fish stocks fall, some families have turned to breeding Siamese crocodiles for their skin and their meat. They harvest snakes from the lake to feed them.

In the floating villages, every aspect of life is connected to the lake, its seasonal changes and the fish that live in it.

People are very poor and most depend on fishing to live. But the population around the lake is growing, leading to the over-exploitation of its resources.

Others live in high stilted houses around the lake. For half the year they live on dry land, but for the other half their fields, roads and bridges disappear under water.

Many people live in floating villages like Preak Toal. In the dry season people group together. But when the lake expands, they spread out and move deep into the flooded forest.

The Tonle Sap is vital to Cambodia, both in terms of the wildlife it nurtures and the communities that depend on it to live.

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