Badung Regency

Badung Regency
Kabupaten Badung
ᬓᬩᬸᬧᬢᬾᬦ᭄ᬩᬤᬸᬂ
Regency

Seal
Motto(s): Çura Dharma Raksaka

Location of Badung Regency
Coordinates: 8°35′0″S 115°11′0″E / 8.58333°S 115.18333°E / -8.58333; 115.18333Coordinates: 8°35′0″S 115°11′0″E / 8.58333°S 115.18333°E / -8.58333; 115.18333
Country  Indonesia
Province  Bali
Capital Mangupura
Government
  Regent I Nyoman Giri Prasta
Area
  Total 420.09 km2 (162.20 sq mi)
Population (2015)
  Total 615,146
  Density 1,500/km2 (3,800/sq mi)
Time zone UTC+8 (WITA)
Area code(s) +62 361
Website www.badungkab.go.id

Badung is a regency of Bali, Indonesia. Its regency seat is in Mangupura.

It has undergone a population boom in the last decade, and has grown into the largest of the suburban regions of Greater Denpasar. It covers Bali's most heavy tourist regions, including Kuta, Legian, Seminyak, Jimbaran, Nusa Dua, Canggu, Uluwatu, Badung, and Mengwi. The northern part of the regency is relatively unpopulated, and the part near the coast and west of Denpasar from Jimbaran and up to Canggu is heavily populated. Ngurah Rai International Airport is located within the Regency.

Administration

The Regency is divided into six districts, listed below with their 2010 Census populations.[1] It is further subdivided into subdistricts/villages.

Demographics

Badung Regency is home to many people from outside Bali who came for work. Therefore, its ethnic makeup is more cosmopolitan than rural Bali, although some parts of the regency itself are still agricultural and rural. It has an area of 418.52 km2 and population of 543,332 (2010 Census) and a density of 1,293.37 per square kilometer.[2] The 2015 intercensal survey listed a population of 615,148, a rate that exceeds Bali as a whole.[3]

Breeding Center

On November 8, 2011 a breeding center for the endangered Bali starling was officially inaugurated in Sibang, Badung Regency inside the Green School area with initial 73 starlings. 20 of the birds came from various zoos in Europe, another 3 came from Jurong Bird Park in Singapore, and the others were already at the breeding center. If the breeding program gets success, some of them will be released into the wild, 4 of the breeding stock to Koelner Zoo and 3 to Jurong Bird Park. There were currently about 500 birds throughout Bali, 287 of them in breeding centers.[4]

References

  1. Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
  2. http://www.bps.go.id/aboutus.php?sp=0&kota=51
  3. https://bali.bps.go.id/webbeta/website/pdf_publikasi/Peta%20Tematik%20Hasil%20SUPAS%202015%20Provinsi%20Bali.pdf
  4. "Bali starling breeding center opened". November 9, 2011.
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