hut in the hills near Chiang Rai The natural environment of the hills used to be dense montane
rain forest.
Swidden agricultural practices and
logging have much reduced the
old-growth forest areas which have been replaced by
secondary forest. For centuries the Thai highlands have been inhabited with
hill tribes mostly from
Chinese or
Tibeto-Burman descent, such as the
Akha,
Yao,
Lahu,
Khmu,
Hmong and
Lisu. These human groups immigrated into this relatively empty region fleeing persecution or harsh central rule in their respective environments, as well as seeking new land for their shifting agricultural productions system. For the past decades these groups have been undergoing a process of integration into the
Thai mainstream. Owing to the unrest in
Burma, some
refugee camps have been established for cross-border refugees in the Thai highlands. Certain
Kayah and
Karen communities, like the "long-necked Karen", are regularly visited by organized tourist groups. At higher elevations, above , one of the main crops was
opium until the 1990s, when the combined effects of development became evident—from the construction of roads into the remote area, increasingly efficient policing, and
opium replacement programs. Yearly
wildfires are started by local farmers during the dry season in different areas of northern Thailand. Often speculators also hire people to set forests on fire in order to claim land title deeds for the areas that, post-fire, become "
degraded forest". The smoke produced by these fires is the main cause of the intense seasonal
air pollution in the Thai highlands, also known as the "northern haze". Fires also contribute to the
floods in the country by denuding forest
undergrowth and the dry forest soil leads to lower water intake for the trees to extract when the rains arrive. Presently large tracts of the mountains are covered with a mixed vegetation resulting from the capacity of the efficient
shifting agricultural system being exceeded. As a result, large areas end up becoming dominated by
Imperata cylindrica grass, which is used throughout Thailand as roofing material. Cattle can graze on the grass to an extent, as
agricultural science research in the 1970s showed. The longer term environmental care of the region is associated with
forestry and in the lower reaches, perennial fruit like
peaches and other trees. Some projects for the restoration of forest cover have been undertaken in ecologically degraded areas. ==See also==