Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Chini Lake

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Location
  
Pekan District, Pahang

Basin countries
  
Malaysia

Primary outflows
  
Chini River

Area
  
50.85 kmĀ²

Chini Lake wwwexpatgocommywpcontentuploads201401boat

Surface area
  
12,565 acres (5,085 ha)

Similar
  
Bera Lake, Teluk Cempedak, Batu Hitam, Taman Negara, Berkelah Falls

Tasik Chini is a lake in Pekan District, Pahang, Malaysia. The lakeshores are inhabited by the Jakun branch of the Orang Asli.

Contents

Map of Tasik Cini, 26650 Chini, Pahang, Malaysia

The 12,565 acres (5,026 hectares) Tasik Chini is the second largest fresh water lake in Malaysia and is made up of a series of 12 lakes. Chini River, which drains from the lake, flows into Pahang River. The river is dammed to maintain the lake's depth during the dry season. However, this has disrupted the natural ecology of the lake and caused the death of trees on its shores due to elevated water level.

Tasik Chini is one of the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve status sites in Malaysia, while the other is Crocker Range in Malaysian Borneo.

Flora and faunaEdit

The lake is also endowed with a rich bio-diversified lush tropical wilderness that is home to 138 species of flora, 300 species of non-aquatic live and 144 species of fresh water fish. Between August and September the lake is transformed into a floating garden with thousands of white and pink lotus flowers covering the surface.

LegendsEdit

The lake offers tranquil and peaceful surroundings steeped in myths and legends that have remained unexplained to this day. According to an Orang Asli legend, the lake is inhabited by a dragon called the Naga Seri Gumum (sometimes referred to as "Malaysia's Loch Ness Monster"). It is believed to contain an ancient sunken Khmer city at the bottom of the lake.

PollutionEdit

The Orang Asli (indigenous people) who live on the banks of Tasik Chini complain that the lake has become polluted. A community leader of an Orang Asli village, Tok Batin Awang Alok, said that logging and ore mining activities have create pollution and caused problems for local residents. Children who bathe in the lake complain of itchiness. Fish caught in the lake have become unfit to eat. The Orang Asli people cannot go to areas to collect roots used in traditional medicine because the areas have been closed for mining.

Dr Hedzri Adnan of Asian Public Intellectuals said that rapid changes at the lake might cause the ecosystem to collapse by 2030. Transparency International's secretary-general Josie Fernandez also said that the lake also risked losing its UNESCO Biosphere Reserve status. However, the Mentri Besar of Pahang, Adnan Yaakob said that the state Health Department found that the water quality to be normal after a three-month study while the muddy waters only occurred near the state Islamic and Malay Customs Council and RISDA's plantations near the lake.

Lake Chini Resort, 26690 Kampong Chini, Pahang, Malaysia 09-468 8088

References

Chini Lake Wikipedia