Hindustan Times (Patiala)

20 tagged peacocks will be released in the wild for study

- Ipsita Pati ipsita.pati@htlive.com n

GURGAON: For the first time in Haryana, about 20 peacocks will be tagged on Friday and released into the wild as part of the longterm study to be conducted on the species, officials of the wildlife department said.

These peacocks will be released into their habitat in Rewari district by the wildlife department on Friday.

The tag rings will be attached to leg of the birds and each of them will have a unique identifica­tion number. Also, the tags on their wings will stay for several years and will help in tracking their movements and studying their food habits and health, officials said.The birds will be ringed and wing-tagged by the members of Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS), a non-government organisati­on engaged in conservati­on and biodiversi­ty research.

“We will provide help in tagging and ringing the birds after which they will be released into their natural habitat. This exercise will help us study their movement and distributi­on pattern,” Bibhu Prakash, director, BNHS, said. The move to ring and tag the peacocks is significan­t, as they are the result of a captive breeding programme launched by the state government in 2012.

The breeding programme was initiated with a view to preserve the species that comes under Schedule-I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972.

The breeding project was commission­ed after a large number of peafowl in Haryana succumbed to the New Castle disease, wildlife department officials said.

According to official data, 145 peafowls were sick and 28 died in Haryana in the period between July and September 2012.

“In Haryana, the peafowl population had declined drasticall­y due to an increase in infrastruc­ture developmen­t and biotic interferen­ce. The other factors which posed an existentia­l threat to the species are the changed cropping pattern, conversion of sandy hills into plain cultivated land, excessive use of chemical spray on crops and sowing of chemically treated seeds.

“As their numbers dwindled , there was this fear that a persistent pattern of decline might put them at risk of extinction in Haryana. So, a captive breeding programme was launched,” Vinod Kumar, chief conservato­r of wildlife, south Haryana, said.

 ?? PARVEEN KUMAR/HT FILE ?? Nearly 20 peacocks will be released into their habitat in Rewari district by the wildlife department on Friday. The birds will be ringed, wingtagged by Bombay Natural History Society.
PARVEEN KUMAR/HT FILE Nearly 20 peacocks will be released into their habitat in Rewari district by the wildlife department on Friday. The birds will be ringed, wingtagged by Bombay Natural History Society.

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