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Ko Tao

Ko Tao (Thai: เกาะเต่า, pronounced [kɔ̀ʔ tàw], lit.''Turtle Island'') is an island in Thailand and is part of the Chumphon Archipelago on the western shore of the Gulf of Thailand. It covers an area of about 21 km2 (8 sq mi). Administratively it is a subdistrict (tambon) of Ko Pha-ngan District (amphoe) of Surat Thani Province. As of 2006, its official population was 1,382.[citation needed] The main settlement is Ban Mae Haad.

Ko Tao
เกาะเต่า
Subdistrict
Shark Bay, on the island's south side
Ko Tao
Coordinates: 10°5′24″N 99°50′17″E / 10.09000°N 99.83806°E / 10.09000; 99.83806
Country Thailand
ProvinceSurat Thani
DistrictKo Pha-ngan
Area
 • Total21 km2 (8 sq mi)
Population
 • Total1,382
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)

The economy of the island is almost exclusively centered on tourism, especially scuba diving. Scuba diving is extremely popular in Ko Tao due to clear visibility, inexpensive pricing, warm water, and the range of sealife to be seen.[1]

History edit

Before being settled the island would be occasionally visited by fishermen from neighbouring islands looking for shelter in a storm or just resting before continuing on their journeys.

It would appear from old maps and descriptions that this island was known by European cartographers and mariners as "Pulo Bardia", indicating that it was first settled by Malayo-Polynesian peoples. The old maps show a chain of three islands aligned north–south and lying off the east coast of the Malay Peninsula. The most northerly and smallest of these islands is marked P. Bardia, the name it had until the early 1900s. The best map example is by John Thornton from The English Pilot, the Third Book, dated 1701, but the specific map of the Gulf of Siam is dated around 1677.[2] Also see maps of the East Indies by William Dampier c.1697.[citation needed] By modern standards of accuracy, the islands are poorly placed on early maps. Seventeenth century marine navigation and cartography used the "backstaff" which, in this area, was accurate to one degree of longitude, or around 60 nautical miles.

The Edinburgh Gazetteer, or Geographical Dictionary published in 1827 also mentions the island and provides a geographical position.[3] In his 1852 book titled Narrative of a Residence in Siam. by Frederick Arthur Neale, the author describes the people and wildlife of Bardia. According to the account there were farms and even cows in a village on the bay lying on the west side of the island. The book includes a fanciful illustration of "Bardia" showing huts and palm trees.[4]

Joseph Huddart in 1801 included these directions for navigating the islands, "To the N.W. by N are two islands of about the same height as Poolo Carnom [Ko Samui]; the first, called SANCORY [Ko Pha-ngan], is 7 leagues from Carnom; the other...,named BARDA, or Bardia [Ko Tao], is 7½ leagues from Sancory."[5] (A league is approximately 3 nautical miles or 5.5 km.)

On 18 June 1899, King Chulalongkorn visited Ko Tao and left as evidence his monogram on a huge boulder at Jor Por Ror Bay next to Sairee Beach. This place is still worshiped today.

In 1933, the island started to be used as a political prison. In 1947 Khuang Abhaiwongse, prime minister at that time, pleaded and received a royal pardon for all prisoners on the island. Everybody was taken to the shore of Surat Thani and Ko Tao was abandoned again.

In the 1980s, overseas travellers began to visit Ko Tao and it quickly became a popular destination. In the 1990s the island became known as a diving site.

Environment edit

The island is an important breeding ground for hawksbill and green turtles. The development of tourism has negatively impacted the health of these grounds, but a breeding programme organised in 2004 by the Royal Thai Navy and KT-DOC, a coalition of local scuba diving centres, has reintroduced hundreds of juvenile turtles to the island's ecosystem.

Chumpon Pinnacle, a dive site to the west of the island has a reputation for divers in search of both whale sharks and bull sharks. However, because of warmer water temperatures over the last year a great number of bull sharks have migrated to cooler waters. The island is host to over 130 species of hard corals, and over 223 species of reef fishes belonging to 53 families.[6]

 
Ko Tao in the Gulf of Thailand

Diving conditions have improved dramatically in the past few years with the continuing education of locals by the dive community. El Niño weather patterns caused a warming of the waters which resulted in the loss of a great deal of the shallow corals near the island. Since then, the recovery has been swift and dramatic. Ko Tao now offers some of the best scuba diving in the Gulf of Thailand.[7] And with help by the island conservation group, Save Koh Tao, the island's environmental outlook is improving.[8]

As one of the world's most popular diving destinations, more attention is being focused on the negative effects of diving on coral reef health around Ko Tao.[9] Natural factors combined with over-use of some areas has led to an increase in the abundance of corallivores such as Drupella snails[10] and the crown-of-thorns starfish[11] around the island in recent years. In 2012, a Marine Zoning and Regulations Master Plan was developed for the island and subsequently become local law, but the positive effects of increased management have yet to be realized.[12]

Tourism and development on the island has grown steadily for the last several decades, with public infrastructure often lagging far behind. Shortages of electricity and fresh water[13] are common, and both solid and liquid waste management is inadequate.[14] About 42,000 tonnes of solid waste are produced annually on the island,[15] resulting in a 45,000 tonne garbage mountain while the island's waste incinerator sits idle.[16]

Tourism edit

 
Wat Ko Tao
 
Sairee Beach
 
Bluespotted ribbontail ray photographed in the waters around Ko Tao

Ko Tao is one of Thailand's most popular tourist spots. The Bangkok Post has cited its annual visitor count as 132,000[15] and three million.[16]

The island is well known for scuba diving and snorkeling, as well as hiking, rock climbing, and bouldering. The most popular place for tourists is Sairee on the west coast, which has a white sandy beach of 1.7 km interrupted only by a few huge boulders and a scattering of medium budget resorts and restaurants. Chalok Baan Khao, to the south of the island, is becoming increasingly popular as an alternative for those wishing to escape the crowds. A great many granite boulders, both in the forests and on the beaches of Ko Tao, attract a growing number of climbers. Ko Tao has a little over 25 dive sites to explore.

Ko Tao is less developed than Ko Samui and Ko Pha-ngan, but has become increasingly popular especially with the mid-20s backpacker crowd in search of relatively inexpensive scuba diving certification. For the past two years the demographics of the island have seen an age increase, with many of the visitors who first visited the island over ten years ago now returning with their families.[citation needed]

A series of tourist deaths – including murder and alleged suicide – particularly since 2014, has prompted some to advise that tourists avoid visiting Ko Tao,[17][18][19] with some British tabloids labelling it as "Death Island".[20] Although tourist arrivals to the island dropped in the months immediately following the murders in 2014, there was little lasting effect.[21]

Dive sites edit

Name Max. depth Visibility Average depth Level Features Marine life
Shark Island[22] 28m 5-30m 15m Open water + Boulders and rock formations, soft corals. Drift diving for the experienced. Resident turtle, great barracuda, titan triggerfish and clown triggerfish
Hin Wong Pinnacle[23] 40 m 15-20 m 17 m Open water + Tabletop rock formation covered with a variety of hard and soft corals. Hawksbill turtle, snapper, sweetlips, porcupine pufferfish, juvenile boxfish
Mango Bay[24] 16 m 5-20 m 10 m Beginner + Only accessible by boat and suitable for training dives with a sandy bottom and shallow reef. Also accessible by a recently built road through the jungle from Sairee Beach Small reef fish, pufferfish, moray eels
White rock[25] 20 m 10-30 m 12 m Open water + A wide band of coral reef with a diversity of hard and soft corals. Wrasses, butterflyfish, angelfish, moray eels, clownfish, and triggerfish.
Nang Yuan Pinnacle (Red Rock)[26] 19 m 10-30 m 10 m Open water + A large boulder with swim-through arches and to the west a large cave to explore. Giant whiptail ray, moray, pipefish, crabs, titan triggerfish and reef shark.
Twins[27] 22 m 10-25 m 12 m Open water + Three groups of granite rocks covered in corals and sponges, divided by sandy patches and a backdrop of coral garden. Bluespotted ribbontail ray, juvenile bluering angelfish, six-barred angelfish, clownfish, scorpionfish and pink anemone.
Green rock[28] 28 m 10-30 m 16 m Open water+ A maze of swim-throughs, canyons, caverns, and caves created by large boulders. Yellow-margin and titan triggerfish, giant trevallies, cobias and stingrays, occasional reef shark sightings.
Japanese gardens 14 m 10-15 m 10 m Beginner + Hundreds of hard and soft coral formations creating the impression of an oriental garden. A dive boat also rests at around 15 meters, which was destroyed in the summer of 2009 and was towed to the site. Abundance of small coral fish and a variety of nudibranchs.
Chumphon pinnacle[29] 45 m 5-30 m 24 m Experienced diver[clarification needed] Four granite pinnacles carpeted with anemones. Whale shark (seasonal), giant grouper, barracuda, bull shark, batfish and tuna.
Southwest pinnacle[30] 33 m 10-30 m 20 m Advanced + A collection of pinnacles with a unique topographical arrangement,[clarification needed] giant fan corals. Whale shark (seasonal), giant grouper, barracuda, occasional leopard shark.
Sail rock[31] 45 m 15-35 m 30 m All levels Huge rock chimmey with a vertical swim-through that ascends from 18 m to 8 m. Amongst the Gulf of Thailands first diving sites Large pelagics, king mackerel, tuna, whale shark and manta.
 
Map of scuba diving sites

Population edit

To serve the tourist population, some 3,000–5,000 Burmese workers staff the island.[32] There is a dominant Thai family on the island that owns several dive schools, resorts, and bars.[33]

Transportation edit

 
Main street, Ko Tao

Motorbikes are the main form of transport and the main cause of injury to tourists in the area.[citation needed]

Ferries edit

Ferry companies Lomprayah, Seatran, and Songserm serve Ko Tao from:

All ferries dock at Ban Mae Haad. Journey times vary due to the different boats used by the various ferry companies.

Air edit

Ko Tao has no airport, but connections to high speed catamarans and ferries are available at three airports.

Rail edit

Train services are available to Chumphon where ferries are available.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Whale Shark spotted at Koh Tao, island in the Gulf of Thailand". Pattaya Mail. 16 June 2020. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  2. ^ Thornton, John. . Royal Museums Greenwich. Archived from the original on 3 May 2012.
  3. ^ The Edinburgh Gazetteer, or Geographical Dictionary:... London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green. 1827. p. 383. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  4. ^ Neale, Frederick Arthur (1852). Narrative of a Residence in Siam. London: Office of the National Illustrated Library. p. 120.
  5. ^ Huddart, Joseph (1801). The Oriental Navigator; or, New Directions for Sailing to and from the East Indies, China, New Holland, etc.,... (2nd ed.). London: Robert Laurie and James Whittle. p. 459. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  6. ^ Scaps, Patrick; Chad M. Scott (2014). "An update to the list of coral reef fishes from Koh Tao, Gulf of Thailand". Check List. 10 (5): 1123–1133. doi:10.15560/10.5.1123.
  7. ^ . Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT). Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
  8. ^ Scott, Chad M.; Wayne Phillips. (PDF). Ramkhamhaeng University International Research Conference 2010. 1: 25–28. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 August 2015.
  9. ^ Lamb, Joleah; James D. True; Srisakul Piromvaragorn; Bette L. Willis (2014). "Scuba diving damage and intensity of tourist activities increases coral disease prevalence". Biological Conservation. 178: 88–96. Bibcode:2014BCons.178...88L. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2014.06.027.
  10. ^ Hoeksema, Bert W.; Chad M. Scott; James D. True (2013). "Dietary shift in corallivorous Drupella snails following a major bleaching event at Koh Tao, Gulf of Thailand". Coral Reefs. 32 (2): 423–428. Bibcode:2013CorRe..32..423H. doi:10.1007/s00338-012-1005-x. S2CID 17232016.
  11. ^ Scott, Chad M.; Rahul Mehrotra; Pau Urgell (2015). "Spawning observation of Acanthaster planci in the Gulf of Thailand". Marine Biodiversity. 45 (4): 1–2. Bibcode:2015MarBd..45..621S. doi:10.1007/s12526-014-0300-x. S2CID 33626561.
  12. ^ Hein, Margaux; Joleah B. Lamb; Chad M. Scott; Bette L. Willis (2015). "Assessing baseline levels of coral health in a newly established marine protected area in a global scuba diving hotspot". Marine Environmental Research. 103: 56–65. Bibcode:2015MarER.103...56H. doi:10.1016/j.marenvres.2014.11.008. PMID 25460062.
  13. ^ Larpnun, Radda; Chad M. Scott; Pinsak Surasawadi. "เที่ยวไทยไปไหนดี ที่เที่ยวยอดฮิตในไทย ที่เที่ยวยอดนิยม รีวิวที่เที่ยวทั่วไทย". Catchment Management and Coral Reef Conservation: A Practical Guide for Coastal Resource Managers to Reduce Damage from Catchment Areas... 178: 88–89.
  14. ^ Charuvastra, Teeranai (21 November 2016). "Koh Tao Alarmed by Growing Trash Pile". Khaosod English. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  15. ^ a b Chaolan, Supapong; Wipatayotin, Apinya (8 April 2018). "Islands seek clean break from trail of tourist trash". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 9 April 2018.
  16. ^ a b Chaolan, Supapong (11 January 2018). "Big stink seals fate of Koh Tao eyesore". Bangkok Post. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  17. ^ Dickinson, Elaine (5 July 2017). "Thailand's Dark Side: Why You Really Shouldn't Visit Koh Tao". The Independent. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  18. ^ Promchertchoo, Pichayada (12 January 2016). "Thailand's beauty 'very dangerous trap': Sister of Koh Tao victim". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  19. ^ Young, Matt (24 March 2018). "Families of murdered tourists on Koh Tao, dubbed Death Island, warn tourists to stay away". News.com.au. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  20. ^ Paddock, Richard C.; Suhartono, Muktita (3 November 2018). "Thai Paradise Gains Reputation as 'Death Island'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  21. ^ Cohen, Erik (1 September 2016). "Contesting narratives: the Koh Tao tourists murders". Asian Anthropology. 15 (3): 207–224. doi:10.1080/1683478X.2016.1204021. ISSN 1683-478X. S2CID 151946538.
  22. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  23. ^ . www.koh-tao.ws. Archived from the original on 24 March 2008. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  24. ^ . www.koh-tao.ws. Archived from the original on 24 March 2008. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  25. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  26. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  27. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  28. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  29. ^ . www.divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  30. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  31. ^ . divingasiapacific.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  32. ^ Campbell, Charlie (17 July 2015). "This Septic Isle: Backpackers, Bloodshed and the Secretive World of Koh Tao". Time. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  33. ^ Peter Walker (24 November 2014). "Koh Tao's dark side: dangers of island where Britons were murdered". The Guardian.

External links edit

  •   Ko Tao travel guide from Wikivoyage

thai, เกาะเต, pronounced, tàw, turtle, island, island, thailand, part, chumphon, archipelago, western, shore, gulf, thailand, covers, area, about, administratively, subdistrict, tambon, ngan, district, amphoe, surat, thani, province, 2006, update, official, po. Ko Tao Thai ekaaeta pronounced kɔ ʔ taw lit Turtle Island is an island in Thailand and is part of the Chumphon Archipelago on the western shore of the Gulf of Thailand It covers an area of about 21 km2 8 sq mi Administratively it is a subdistrict tambon of Ko Pha ngan District amphoe of Surat Thani Province As of 2006 update its official population was 1 382 citation needed The main settlement is Ban Mae Haad Ko Tao ekaaetaSubdistrictShark Bay on the island s south sideKo TaoCoordinates 10 5 24 N 99 50 17 E 10 09000 N 99 83806 E 10 09000 99 83806Country ThailandProvinceSurat ThaniDistrictKo Pha nganArea Total21 km2 8 sq mi Population Total1 382Time zoneUTC 7 ICT The economy of the island is almost exclusively centered on tourism especially scuba diving Scuba diving is extremely popular in Ko Tao due to clear visibility inexpensive pricing warm water and the range of sealife to be seen 1 Contents 1 History 2 Environment 3 Tourism 3 1 Dive sites 4 Population 5 Transportation 6 Ferries 7 Air 8 Rail 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editBefore being settled the island would be occasionally visited by fishermen from neighbouring islands looking for shelter in a storm or just resting before continuing on their journeys It would appear from old maps and descriptions that this island was known by European cartographers and mariners as Pulo Bardia indicating that it was first settled by Malayo Polynesian peoples The old maps show a chain of three islands aligned north south and lying off the east coast of the Malay Peninsula The most northerly and smallest of these islands is marked P Bardia the name it had until the early 1900s The best map example is by John Thornton from The English Pilot the Third Book dated 1701 but the specific map of the Gulf of Siam is dated around 1677 2 Also see maps of the East Indies by William Dampier c 1697 citation needed By modern standards of accuracy the islands are poorly placed on early maps Seventeenth century marine navigation and cartography used the backstaff which in this area was accurate to one degree of longitude or around 60 nautical miles The Edinburgh Gazetteer or Geographical Dictionary published in 1827 also mentions the island and provides a geographical position 3 In his 1852 book titled Narrative of a Residence in Siam by Frederick Arthur Neale the author describes the people and wildlife of Bardia According to the account there were farms and even cows in a village on the bay lying on the west side of the island The book includes a fanciful illustration of Bardia showing huts and palm trees 4 Joseph Huddart in 1801 included these directions for navigating the islands To the N W by N are two islands of about the same height as Poolo Carnom Ko Samui the first called SANCORY Ko Pha ngan is 7 leagues from Carnom the other named BARDA or Bardia Ko Tao is 7 leagues from Sancory 5 A league is approximately 3 nautical miles or 5 5 km On 18 June 1899 King Chulalongkorn visited Ko Tao and left as evidence his monogram on a huge boulder at Jor Por Ror Bay next to Sairee Beach This place is still worshiped today In 1933 the island started to be used as a political prison In 1947 Khuang Abhaiwongse prime minister at that time pleaded and received a royal pardon for all prisoners on the island Everybody was taken to the shore of Surat Thani and Ko Tao was abandoned again In the 1980s overseas travellers began to visit Ko Tao and it quickly became a popular destination In the 1990s the island became known as a diving site Environment editThe island is an important breeding ground for hawksbill and green turtles The development of tourism has negatively impacted the health of these grounds but a breeding programme organised in 2004 by the Royal Thai Navy and KT DOC a coalition of local scuba diving centres has reintroduced hundreds of juvenile turtles to the island s ecosystem Chumpon Pinnacle a dive site to the west of the island has a reputation for divers in search of both whale sharks and bull sharks However because of warmer water temperatures over the last year a great number of bull sharks have migrated to cooler waters The island is host to over 130 species of hard corals and over 223 species of reef fishes belonging to 53 families 6 nbsp Ko Tao in the Gulf of Thailand Diving conditions have improved dramatically in the past few years with the continuing education of locals by the dive community El Nino weather patterns caused a warming of the waters which resulted in the loss of a great deal of the shallow corals near the island Since then the recovery has been swift and dramatic Ko Tao now offers some of the best scuba diving in the Gulf of Thailand 7 And with help by the island conservation group Save Koh Tao the island s environmental outlook is improving 8 As one of the world s most popular diving destinations more attention is being focused on the negative effects of diving on coral reef health around Ko Tao 9 Natural factors combined with over use of some areas has led to an increase in the abundance of corallivores such as Drupella snails 10 and the crown of thorns starfish 11 around the island in recent years In 2012 a Marine Zoning and Regulations Master Plan was developed for the island and subsequently become local law but the positive effects of increased management have yet to be realized 12 Tourism and development on the island has grown steadily for the last several decades with public infrastructure often lagging far behind Shortages of electricity and fresh water 13 are common and both solid and liquid waste management is inadequate 14 About 42 000 tonnes of solid waste are produced annually on the island 15 resulting in a 45 000 tonne garbage mountain while the island s waste incinerator sits idle 16 Tourism edit nbsp Wat Ko Tao See also Koh Tao murders nbsp Sairee Beach nbsp Bluespotted ribbontail ray photographed in the waters around Ko Tao Ko Tao is one of Thailand s most popular tourist spots The Bangkok Post has cited its annual visitor count as 132 000 15 and three million 16 The island is well known for scuba diving and snorkeling as well as hiking rock climbing and bouldering The most popular place for tourists is Sairee on the west coast which has a white sandy beach of 1 7 km interrupted only by a few huge boulders and a scattering of medium budget resorts and restaurants Chalok Baan Khao to the south of the island is becoming increasingly popular as an alternative for those wishing to escape the crowds A great many granite boulders both in the forests and on the beaches of Ko Tao attract a growing number of climbers Ko Tao has a little over 25 dive sites to explore Ko Tao is less developed than Ko Samui and Ko Pha ngan but has become increasingly popular especially with the mid 20s backpacker crowd in search of relatively inexpensive scuba diving certification For the past two years the demographics of the island have seen an age increase with many of the visitors who first visited the island over ten years ago now returning with their families citation needed A series of tourist deaths including murder and alleged suicide particularly since 2014 has prompted some to advise that tourists avoid visiting Ko Tao 17 18 19 with some British tabloids labelling it as Death Island 20 Although tourist arrivals to the island dropped in the months immediately following the murders in 2014 there was little lasting effect 21 Dive sites edit Name Max depth Visibility Average depth Level Features Marine life Shark Island 22 28m 5 30m 15m Open water Boulders and rock formations soft corals Drift diving for the experienced Resident turtle great barracuda titan triggerfish and clown triggerfish Hin Wong Pinnacle 23 40 m 15 20 m 17 m Open water Tabletop rock formation covered with a variety of hard and soft corals Hawksbill turtle snapper sweetlips porcupine pufferfish juvenile boxfish Mango Bay 24 16 m 5 20 m 10 m Beginner Only accessible by boat and suitable for training dives with a sandy bottom and shallow reef Also accessible by a recently built road through the jungle from Sairee Beach Small reef fish pufferfish moray eels White rock 25 20 m 10 30 m 12 m Open water A wide band of coral reef with a diversity of hard and soft corals Wrasses butterflyfish angelfish moray eels clownfish and triggerfish Nang Yuan Pinnacle Red Rock 26 19 m 10 30 m 10 m Open water A large boulder with swim through arches and to the west a large cave to explore Giant whiptail ray moray pipefish crabs titan triggerfish and reef shark Twins 27 22 m 10 25 m 12 m Open water Three groups of granite rocks covered in corals and sponges divided by sandy patches and a backdrop of coral garden Bluespotted ribbontail ray juvenile bluering angelfish six barred angelfish clownfish scorpionfish and pink anemone Green rock 28 28 m 10 30 m 16 m Open water A maze of swim throughs canyons caverns and caves created by large boulders Yellow margin and titan triggerfish giant trevallies cobias and stingrays occasional reef shark sightings Japanese gardens 14 m 10 15 m 10 m Beginner Hundreds of hard and soft coral formations creating the impression of an oriental garden A dive boat also rests at around 15 meters which was destroyed in the summer of 2009 and was towed to the site Abundance of small coral fish and a variety of nudibranchs Chumphon pinnacle 29 45 m 5 30 m 24 m Experienced diver clarification needed Four granite pinnacles carpeted with anemones Whale shark seasonal giant grouper barracuda bull shark batfish and tuna Southwest pinnacle 30 33 m 10 30 m 20 m Advanced A collection of pinnacles with a unique topographical arrangement clarification needed giant fan corals Whale shark seasonal giant grouper barracuda occasional leopard shark Sail rock 31 45 m 15 35 m 30 m All levels Huge rock chimmey with a vertical swim through that ascends from 18 m to 8 m Amongst the Gulf of Thailands first diving sites Large pelagics king mackerel tuna whale shark and manta nbsp Map of scuba diving sitesPopulation editTo serve the tourist population some 3 000 5 000 Burmese workers staff the island 32 There is a dominant Thai family on the island that owns several dive schools resorts and bars 33 Transportation edit nbsp Main street Ko Tao Motorbikes are the main form of transport and the main cause of injury to tourists in the area citation needed Ferries editFerry companies Lomprayah Seatran and Songserm serve Ko Tao from Surat Thani 4 hours day boat 9 hours on overnight boat Chumphon 1 5 3 hours 7 hours on overnight boat Ko Samui approximately 2 5 hours Ko Pha ngan approximately 1 5 2 hours All ferries dock at Ban Mae Haad Journey times vary due to the different boats used by the various ferry companies Air editKo Tao has no airport but connections to high speed catamarans and ferries are available at three airports Chumphon Airport CJM Ko Samui Airport USM Surat Thani Airport URT Rail editTrain services are available to Chumphon where ferries are available See also editList of islands of ThailandReferences edit Whale Shark spotted at Koh Tao island in the Gulf of Thailand Pattaya Mail 16 June 2020 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Thornton John The English Pilot the Third Book Royal Museums Greenwich Archived from the original on 3 May 2012 The Edinburgh Gazetteer or Geographical Dictionary London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green 1827 p 383 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Neale Frederick Arthur 1852 Narrative of a Residence in Siam London Office of the National Illustrated Library p 120 Huddart Joseph 1801 The Oriental Navigator or New Directions for Sailing to and from the East Indies China New Holland etc 2nd ed London Robert Laurie and James Whittle p 459 Retrieved 4 January 2015 Scaps Patrick Chad M Scott 2014 An update to the list of coral reef fishes from Koh Tao Gulf of Thailand Check List 10 5 1123 1133 doi 10 15560 10 5 1123 About Koh Tao Tourism Authority of Thailand TAT Archived from the original on 22 April 2019 Retrieved 11 October 2018 Scott Chad M Wayne Phillips A Sustainable Model for Resource Management and Protection Achievable through Empowering Local Communities and Businesses PDF Ramkhamhaeng University International Research Conference 2010 1 25 28 Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 5 August 2015 Lamb Joleah James D True Srisakul Piromvaragorn Bette L Willis 2014 Scuba diving damage and intensity of tourist activities increases coral disease prevalence Biological Conservation 178 88 96 Bibcode 2014BCons 178 88L doi 10 1016 j biocon 2014 06 027 Hoeksema Bert W Chad M Scott James D True 2013 Dietary shift in corallivorous Drupella snails following a major bleaching event at Koh Tao Gulf of Thailand Coral Reefs 32 2 423 428 Bibcode 2013CorRe 32 423H doi 10 1007 s00338 012 1005 x S2CID 17232016 Scott Chad M Rahul Mehrotra Pau Urgell 2015 Spawning observation of Acanthaster planci in the Gulf of Thailand Marine Biodiversity 45 4 1 2 Bibcode 2015MarBd 45 621S doi 10 1007 s12526 014 0300 x S2CID 33626561 Hein Margaux Joleah B Lamb Chad M Scott Bette L Willis 2015 Assessing baseline levels of coral health in a newly established marine protected area in a global scuba diving hotspot Marine Environmental Research 103 56 65 Bibcode 2015MarER 103 56H doi 10 1016 j marenvres 2014 11 008 PMID 25460062 Larpnun Radda Chad M Scott Pinsak Surasawadi ethiywithyipihndi thiethiywyxdhitinithy thiethiywyxdniym riwiwthiethiywthwithy Catchment Management and Coral Reef Conservation A Practical Guide for Coastal Resource Managers to Reduce Damage from Catchment Areas 178 88 89 Charuvastra Teeranai 21 November 2016 Koh Tao Alarmed by Growing Trash Pile Khaosod English Retrieved 21 November 2016 a b Chaolan Supapong Wipatayotin Apinya 8 April 2018 Islands seek clean break from trail of tourist trash Bangkok Post Retrieved 9 April 2018 a b Chaolan Supapong 11 January 2018 Big stink seals fate of Koh Tao eyesore Bangkok Post Retrieved 11 January 2018 Dickinson Elaine 5 July 2017 Thailand s Dark Side Why You Really Shouldn t Visit Koh Tao The Independent Retrieved 8 October 2017 Promchertchoo Pichayada 12 January 2016 Thailand s beauty very dangerous trap Sister of Koh Tao victim Channel NewsAsia Retrieved 8 October 2017 Young Matt 24 March 2018 Families of murdered tourists on Koh Tao dubbed Death Island warn tourists to stay away News com au Retrieved 23 March 2018 Paddock Richard C Suhartono Muktita 3 November 2018 Thai Paradise Gains Reputation as Death Island The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Cohen Erik 1 September 2016 Contesting narratives the Koh Tao tourists murders Asian Anthropology 15 3 207 224 doi 10 1080 1683478X 2016 1204021 ISSN 1683 478X S2CID 151946538 Red Rock Shark Island divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Hin Wong Pinnacle www koh tao ws Archived from the original on 24 March 2008 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Mango Bay www koh tao ws Archived from the original on 24 March 2008 Retrieved 19 July 2021 White rock divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Nang Yuan Pinnacle divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Twins divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Green rock divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Chumphon pinnacle www divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 South west pinnacle divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 30 October 2009 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Sail rock divingasiapacific com Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Campbell Charlie 17 July 2015 This Septic Isle Backpackers Bloodshed and the Secretive World of Koh Tao Time Retrieved 8 October 2017 Peter Walker 24 November 2014 Koh Tao s dark side dangers of island where Britons were murdered The Guardian External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ko Tao nbsp Ko Tao travel guide from Wikivoyage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ko Tao amp oldid 1221404009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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