West Bali National Park | |
Alt Name: | Taman Nasional Bali Barat |
Iucn Category: | II |
Map: | Indonesia Bali |
Map Width: | 280 |
Label: | West Bali NP |
Label Position: | right |
Location: | Buleleng, Bali, Indonesia |
Coordinates: | -8.1333°N 143°W |
Area: | 190.0289 km2 |
Established: | 1941 |
Visitation Num: | 5,592 |
Visitation Year: | 2007[1] |
Governing Body: | Ministry of Environment and Forestry |
West Bali National Park (Indonesian: Taman Nasional Bali Barat) is a national park located in Buleleng Regency and Jembrana Regency, on the west point of Bali, Indonesia. The park covers around, some 82% of which is on land and the remainder at sea.[2] This is approximately 3% of Bali's total land area.
The park was established in 1941 on 740 km2, aiming at protecting Bali tigers (Panthera tigris ssp. balica) - the last of which, as it happened, had already been killed. The surface of the park was reduced[3] to 190.0289 km2 in 1985; the newly excluded area was designated as protected reserve.[3]
More recently, there are talks about converting some or all the park into a biosphere reserve under the Man and Biosphere Unesco program, which allows for local people to keep their traditional close relation with their environment. This better corresponds to the recommendation 5.29 of the Vth IUCN World Parks Congress whereby ‘protected areas should not exist as islands, divorced from the social, cultural and economic context in which they are located’.[4]
In 1994 the Regulation 18/1994 was issued at a national level, with a clause on Nature Tourism Enterprising in Utilisation Zone of the National Parks, Botanical Garden, and Recreation Parks. This clause allows private tourism companies to operate in the utilisation zones of National Parks while keeping in line with the main aim “to increase the use of natural beauty and uniqueness of the National Park’s utilisation zone, botanical garden and recreation parks” (n° 18, article 2, point 2). It also requires “private tourism enterprises to involve the people living in the surrounding areas in their business activities” (article 10, point e), in order to help reduce local people's dependency on forest or marine resources for their livelihood. It also makes better use of their local and traditional knowledge, imbedded in the local systems and institutions, and allows for the development of new approaches for stewardship and for adapting and transforming governance.[4]
The park covers a surface of, with of land (82,02 %) and of sea (19,98 %). This covers nearly 5% of Bali’s entire land surface.[5]
West of the park is the seaport village of, and the villages of Pahlenkong and Pejarakan are to the east. The park has three entrances: one by the coastal road in the north, coming from Lovina Beach, Pemuteran and Banjuwedang ; one by the coastal road coming from the south, reaching Gilimanuk; and by ferries from Ketapang, East Java, to Gilimanuk.
The park is not quite in one block: a peninsula of around juts out to the north-west and is separated from Bali's mainland by the island's coastal road linking to the south-west, the village of Slumberklampok in the middle, and Pantai Teluk Terima ("beach of the bay of Terima") in Terima Bay to the north-east (and to further places of Bali's north-west coast) (see map below); most of that part of the coastal road is not included in the park. Gilimanuk itself is not included in the park either; nor is Pantai Teluk Terima and about 1 km of its surroung coast in Terima Bay.[6]
It includes several habitats: a savanna, mangroves, montane and mixed-monsoon forests, coastal forest and seagrass, and coral islands.[7] To the north, The park includes a 1000m (3,000feet) long beach, reef, and islets. The highest elevations in the park are Mount Kelatakan at and Mount Prapat Agung at .[6]
It also includes several temples, among which the Dang Kahyangan Prapat Agung temple some 2 km north of Prapat Agung beach (where one can see a beautiful gradation of coastal sea hues from vivid turquoise to deep indigo) and 400 m away from the coast.[8] This temple boasts an intriguing pond less than 50 sq. m.,[9] the water of which varies between five different colours: red, black, yellow, white, clear, and blue. That pond is mentioned in the Dwijendra Tatwa[10] which recounts the journey made by the charismatic figure Dang Hyang Nirartha in Bali, Lombok and Sumbawa.[11] The whereabouts of the temple had been forgotten, as it is very isolated in the forest; it has only been (re-)discovered in 1990, through researches based on the Dwijendra Tatwa. Thanks to the temple standing within the national park, any development is strictly restricted to what nature dictates[10] — although a narrow road can bee seen on some photos.[8]
Banyuwedang hotspring (Pemandian Air Panas Banyuwedang[12]), near the Mimpi resort in Pejarakan, has an average temperature of 40 °C — the hottest hot spring in Bali. Royals used to bathe there and the spring waters are believed to have healing properties.[13]
Some 160 animal species are found inside the park.
In June 2011, West Bali National Park received forty Bali mynas released from Surabaya Zoo and twenty from Taman Safari Indonesia.[2]
These include reptiles such as hawksbill turtle and water monitor.
The marine area is rich of over 110 species of corals from 18 families, with 22 species of the mushroom coral family and 27 species of Acropora coral.[14]
Plant species known to grow in this national park include Pterospermum diversifolium, Antidesma bunius, Lagerstroemia speciosa, Steleochocarpus burahol, Santalum album, Aleurites moluccanus, Sterculia foetida, Schleichera oleosa, Dipterocarpus hasseltii, Garcinia dulcis, Alstonia scholaris, Manilkara kauki, Dalbergia latifolia and Cassia fistula.
The Bali Tower Bistro in the Menjangan resort boasts a five-story wooden structure (the Tower) that rises above the trees' canopy tree line; the top floors offer a 360° panoramic view over the park.[13]