If you walked in the forests of Cambodia a century ago, the soundscape would have been much different. Tigers left tracks in the red dust, elephants trumpeted in distant glades, and among the shadows, packs of wild dogs — dholes — prowled trails and riverbanks, their strange whistles and high-pitched calls rippling through the morning mist.
Today, the dhole is a ghost in Cambodia’s forests. Known in Khmer as “ចចក” (châ-châk), this reddish, slender canid slips through the eastern plains and tangled valleys of the Cardamoms, rarely seen and little understood by most people. To scientists, it’s Cuon alpinus, the Asiatic wild dog. But to Cambodia, it’s a figure perched between myth and memory, a symbol of what survives — and what’s slipping away.

Life in the Wild
Were you ever lucky enough to spot a dhole pack, you’d be struck by their restless energy. These are social creatures, hunting in teams that can number a dozen or more. Their prey? Deer, wild pig, the young of larger animals if fortune favors. Dholes hunt by endurance, nipping at flanks during long chases, working as a tight-knit group — no lone wolves here.
The forests of Mondulkiri and Ratanakiri, with their rivers, dry woods, and pockets of evergreen, still offer sanctuary. Sometimes, hikers in Virachey or guides in Keo Seima hear the dholes’ yips echoing at dawn. But their numbers have plummeted, and sightings are a rarity. Trail cameras catch glimpses: a lean dog nose to the ground, a blur in the undergrowth, but the stories outnumber the encounters.
Unseen, Under Threat
For all its adaptability, the dhole faces troubles at every turn. Cambodia has lost forests fast — cut for timber, cleared for crops, carved up by roads. As green turns to field and field to farmland, there’s less room for wide-ranging predators and less cover for their prey. The deer and boar the dholes depend on have nearly vanished from many regions, hunted for meat or lost to snares.
Dholes, too, fall victim to traps set for other animals. Sometimes, driven by hunger, they take a goat or cow, prompting angry villagers to lay poisoned baits. Domestic dogs, roaming at the fringes, harbor diseases — canine distemper, rabies — spreading them to their wild relatives.
Official protection is spotty. Laws exist but stretch thin. In the minds of many rural folk, dholes are just part of the landscape — neither celebrated nor hated, but fading all the same.
Guardians and Scientists
It hasn’t always been so quiet for the dhole. In recent years, Cambodia’s conservationists have started to pay attention, partly because the big predators — tiger and leopard — have vanished from most of the kingdom. Without these apex carnivores, dholes — never as numerous or flashy — have quietly taken the mantle.
Rangers in green and brown fan out beneath the canopy, collecting snares, logging the passage of dholes and prey with camera traps. Researchers analyze scat, map territories, or talk with local communities. NGOs, with limited funds, run workshops about the role these wild dogs play. Sometimes there are school visits, or poster campaigns in markets, to teach new generations what a dhole is and why it matters.
Some places are ahead of the curve. In the Eastern Plains, conservation teams try to connect patches of forest so dholes and other wide-ranging animals can move freely. They know, as older Cambodian farmers do, that once forest corridors are severed, what’s inside can’t survive for long.
The Dhole in Cambodian Stories
But the dhole isn’t just a creature of meat and bone. Its image stalks through folktales and conversations, showing up far more often in speech than in sight.
Ask a Cambodian grandparent about the châ-châk, and you’ll likely get a story. Most of the times, the dhole is greedy, learning a lesson the hard way. He is not as ferocious as the tiger, nor as clever as the rabbit. Often, the dhole fails miserably in its undertakings and becomes the laughingstock of the other animals. The tales of the dhole were once told by firelight or under stilted houses, and they’re always more than entertainment: they’re blueprints for living, fables about humility, sharp wits, and the hot water that comes with greed or pride.
Hard Roads Ahead
Yet, culture alone doesn’t keep an animal safe. All across Southeast Asia, dholes are in freefall. Cambodia is no exception. Their food is vanishing. Their forests are smaller every year. Pressure comes from every side — urban growth, plantations, illegal hunting, even the slow drip of droughts and fire.
Still, there is room for hope. Quietly, patiently, the patchwork of land that makes up Cambodia’s wild east and southwest still holds enough to shelter small populations. Conservation groups are building bridges — literal and figurative — between people and wildlife. There’s growing recognition that dholes, though less famous than tigers or elephants, matter immensely for keeping forests healthy. As top predators, they check populations of other animals, shaping the ecosystem in unseen ways.
Why the Dhole Matters
To lose the dhole is to lose not just a species, but a thread in the great tapestry of Cambodia’s wild heart. Its stories, its spirit, the lessons it weaves into folklore — all fade a little if the dholes disappear for good.
But dholes are survivors. As long as a handful remain, there’s a chance for a comeback. Secure them room to run, prey to chase, rivers to drink from, and let Cambodians — especially young ones — remember what the châ-châk was, and could still be. Because a landscape that can shelter an elusive, clever canid is one that still has wildness left.
And every country needs a little wildness, if only to remind us of what the world once was, and might be again.


















