The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

The great migration

- JODIE COHEN

When my family first moved to Israel, I remember one day I noticed a strange black cloud in an otherwise perfectly blue sky. The cloud moved quickly and in a strange pattern, backward and forward. I soon realized it was moving in formation. It wasn’t a cloud at all – it was thousands upon thousands of birds in the sky, all flying together on one perfect journey. Without realizing it, I had just witnessed the great bird migration.

Every year between late August and mid-December, half a billion birds – yes, half a billion – travel from Europe and Asia toward warmer climates in Africa, where there is more food. As they cross the Middle East, their last resting stop for a mere 3,000 km. is in Israel. So it’s absolutely crucial that during this stop, they are able to get enough food and water to sustain them as they continue on their journey for thousands of miles over the Sahara Desert in North Africa.

It’s not an overstatem­ent to say that if these birds were to die on their journey, this would have an impact on ecosystems all over the world, which rely on the great bird migration.

One-eighth of all birds are threatened with extinction

Every four to five years, a nonprofit called BirdLife Internatio­nal publishes the State of the World’s Birds report. The organizati­on focuses on birds because it says they are an excellent barometer for planetary health, revealing wider trends in natural ecosystems. The conclusion­s of its most recent assessment, which it published in 2022, are disturbing.

One-eighth of all birds around the world are at risk of becoming extinct, and almost 50% of all bird species are decreasing. This comes as a result of climate change and man’s overuse of nature’s resources, such as activities like non-sustainabl­e agricultur­al practices and logging.

The proposed solution is known as “rewilding.” These are conservati­on efforts with the goal of restoring and protecting eco, or wilderness areas, as well as natural processes. Not only will this help to rebalance nature, but it is hoped that rewilding will save rare bird species from extinction.

Israel – a global center for biodiversi­ty

One of the smallest countries in the world, Israel – and in particular, the Hula Valley in the North – is critical

for the birds’ progress, and indeed for nature on three entire continents. The Hula Valley Lake, which is only 5 km. long, is a beautiful lake in the Upper Galilee. Visitors at the Hula Valley can watch hundreds of species of birds as they migrate south.

The lake was once drained, until KKL-JNF began the process of restoring it. Today, it not only sustains millions of birds and wetland wildlife every year, but it also attracts over 400,000 visitors, who come with their binoculars and cameras to watch, for example, the miracle of 40,000 cranes taking off at sunrise. It’s considered one of the best nature experience­s in the world and annually generates $200 million for the area.

The success of restoring the Hula Valley shows that it is possible to reverse the harm done in the past. But that’s just the beginning.

From Start-Up Nation to Start-Up Nature

Israel is known as the Start-Up Nation thanks to its thriving hi-tech sector and world leading research and developmen­t. But many in the country are now applying Israel’s innovation­s and its people’s innovative spirit to restoring nature.

For 60 years, the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel (SPNI) has been Israel’s top policy and planning conservati­on organizati­on and has been deeply concerned about the country’s disappeari­ng wetlands over time. This situation came about not only after Israel drained swamps to wipe out malaria-infected mosquitoes but also after much of the country’s 200,000 dunams of wetlands were taken over for agricultur­al purposes and to create fish farms.

Today, there are less than 20,000 dunams of wetlands left. To restore them, the SPNI has introduced the Start-Up Nature initiative. Start-Up Nature seeks to turn unused agricultur­al land into thriving wetland sanctuarie­s, preserving the important bird migration route, creating habitats for millions of creatures and – in the spirit of the Israeli start-up sector – no doubt generating millions for the economy in the process.

To kick off this initiative, Start-Up Nature set up an $11m. pilot project at Kfar Ruppin, a kibbutz in the Beit She’an Valley, also in the North. Having rewilded the reservoir there, it wasn’t long before dozens of species of birds and wildlife began to return to the area. The Kfar Ruppin Birding Park and Wetland Reserve officially opened in 2021.

A growing ambition

The SPNI now wants to work with numerous kibbutzim to reestablis­h wetlands and build ecotourism sites across the country. Its second pilot site has opened at Kibbutz Ma’agan Michael, which is located on the Mediterran­ean Sea coast between Haifa and Hadera. Plans include a 33-acre site with four ponds, a migration research station with the University of Haifa and an education center with walking trails, accommodat­ing 150,000 visitors every year.

In July, the government approved a plan to clean up 37 km. of the Jordan River, restoring its wildlife, and creating further opportunit­ies for the tourism sector. And at the UN’s recent COP27 Climate Summit at Sharm e-Sheikh in Egypt, Jordan and Israel signed a Declaratio­n of Intent to clean up the Jordan River together. This is important for both countries, not only for its ecological value but also for its historical, religious and economic value.

The venture will require both countries to cooperate on the restoratio­n, which will provide opportunit­ies for diplomacy, employment and tourism, as well as improving the quality of life of local residents. In addition, Israel and Jordan have agreed to look into creating a regional center for research and academic cooperatio­n and to restore streams that run into the river.

Restarting nature, restarting hope

If Israel’s plans continue at pace, it has a real opportunit­y to save millions of birds and serve as a global center for biodiversi­ty, research and education. There’s a further environmen­tal benefit too because wetlands are even better than forests at capturing and storing carbon. And they’re just as beautiful, helping to connect people across continents, connect people with nature, and connect people to our shared future.

BirdLife Internatio­nal concluded that “the next decade is critical if we are to stop unraveling the fabric of life and destroying our global safety net. Government­s must adopt a Global Biodiversi­ty Framework with ambitious commitment­s to ensure transforma­tive change and urgent implementa­tion of action. The future of the world’s birds and ultimately our own species depends upon it.”

It remains to be seen what the new government will do – that will certainly be a subject for a future column. In the meantime, it appears the SPNI would like Israel to be known as much for starting up nature as for being the Start-Up Nation. I’d also like to add that when Israel has successful­ly turned desert into thriving biodiversi­ty hotspots, at a time of global climate change, I believe it should also be known for restarting hope.

One of the world’s smallest countries, Israel is critical for for nature on three continents

The writer is Middle East Correspond­ent for India’s WION (World Is One) TV news channel. The author of Tikkun Olam: Israel vs COVID-19, she has helped numerous multinatio­nals report on their contributi­ons to tackling the UN’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. On Twitter: @ JodieCohen­613.

Thanks to Israel21c for bringing Start-Up Nature to the writer’s attention.

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 ?? ?? CRANES AT Hula Valley Lake. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)
CRANES AT Hula Valley Lake. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

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