The National - News

Captive breeding will help to save our majestic birds

- PETER HELLYER Peter Hellyer is a consultant specialisi­ng in the UAE’s history and culture

In the past, the conservati­on community and devotees of falconry viewed one another with a degree of suspicion at best and, at worst, open hostility. But there have been important steps made recently in a growing collaborat­ion between the two groups. Earlier this year, I attended a conference in Abu Dhabi called Summit for the Flyways, which brought together both conservati­on organisati­ons such as BirdLife Internatio­nal and the Ornitholog­ical Society of the Middle East, the Caucasus and Central Asia, and bodies related to falconry, including the Abu Dhabi-based Internatio­nal Fund for Houbara Conservati­on. The meeting, supported by the UN-affiliated Convention on the Conservati­on of Migratory Species and the Environmen­t Agency-Abu Dhabi, examined threats to migratory birds moving between Africa, Europe and Asia and discussed initiative­s to reduce those threats.

The conflict between the two camps has been fading as both have recognised that there is scope to work together and that the two passions are not mutually exclusive. After all, there can be no long-term future for falconry if the survival of wild falcons and their favoured prey, the houbara, is in danger. At the same time, the conservati­on of the habitats in which these species live has a beneficial effect on all other creatures that live there. There are both shared interests and potential conflicts of interest and the identifica­tion of a happy medium is, surely, the way forward.

As a boy growing up in the English countrysid­e, I developed a profound interest in the environmen­t and the wildlife around me. With a father who was a top horticultu­ral writer and a mother who taught biology, that was, perhaps, not surprising. For years, I used to shoot as well, deriving satisfacti­on not so much from the quarry as from the gradually honed ability to observe wildlife around me. I no longer shoot but I’ve never found it difficult to combine passion for the environmen­t with support for some forms of country sports, field sports or blood sports, whatever you might call them.

As a birdwatche­r in the UAE, I have also learned to understand the passion for falconry shared by many Emiratis. It has been fascinatin­g, therefore, to observe how the country has helped to bring together the two sides of the debate between conservati­onists and falconers.

That process began with the first Internatio­nal Conference on Falconry and Conservati­on, held in Abu Dhabi in December 1976 under the patronage of the late Sheikh Zayed, a man once described as “a conservati­onist before the term became fashionabl­e”. The event, which I attended, brought falconers into the mainstream of global conservati­on initiative­s for the first time.

Recognisin­g that population­s of wild houbara were declining, not only because of falconry but also because of major habitat changes, Sheikh Zayed encouraged local falconers to limit the number of houbaras they caught and to stop hunting in the breeding season. He launched programmes to breed the species in captivity which, after years of trial and error, now see tens of thousands of birds being bred and released each year.

At the same time, he sought to tackle threats to falcon population­s triggered by capturing birds from the wild for use in falconry. One initiative was the launch more than 20 years ago of the Sheikh Zayed Falcon Release Programme. It meant birds caught in the wild were released at the end of each hunting season to re-integrate into their natural habitat. In the UAE, that has now become standard practice.

Another initiative was the developmen­t of captive breeding programmes of species like saker and peregrine to reduce the demand for wild birds. Such programmes can now be found not only in more temperate climates like the UK but also here in the UAE, such as the project run by Mohammed Al Kamda in Dubai, which received attention in The

National last week. There remain, of course, areas of conflict between conservati­onists and followers of falconry and other field sports. Falcons caught illegally in Britain and elsewhere are still exported to the Middle East. Suspicious deaths of another bird of prey – the hen harrier – on hunting estates in Britain indicate that members of the shooting community are still targeting these endangered birds. More needs to be done to eradicate these practices.

One key initiative to emerge from the flyways summit was the launch of the new Mohamed bin Zayed Raptor Conservati­on Fund supporting initiative­s protecting endangered birds of prey globally, both falcons and other species. Through such means, old rivalries are being laid to rest as conservati­onists and supporters of field sports like falconry come together in pursuit of the common goal of protecting endangered wildlife.

 ?? AFP ?? A falcon on display at a Middle Eastern hunting show
AFP A falcon on display at a Middle Eastern hunting show
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates