Gulf Times

Eight captive-reared vultures with tracking devices to be released

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Eight critically endangered white-backed vultures reared in captivity are set to take wings early next year for the first time in India since the vulture conservati­on centre near Haryana was set up in September 2001.

The Jatayu Conservati­on Breeding Centre on the edge of the Bir Shikargaha Wildlife Sanctuary is a joint project of Haryana and the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) with the British government’s Darwin Initiative for the Survival of Species Fund to investigat­e the massive decline of three critically endangered Gyps species of vultures in India.

Six captive-bred vultures and two rescued from the wild will be tagged with a 30g device for satellite telemetry each with a battery backup of three to four years and this will help in understand­ing their behaviour and survival instincts in the wild, BNHS Principal Scientist Vibha Prakash told IANS.

He said the vultures would be released most probably by MarchApril next year in the Bir Shikargaha sanctuary where the BNHS is working to declare it as vulture safe zone, which extends transbound­ary into Himachal Pradesh where the wildlife awareness among the villagers is quite high.

“If any of the released vulture dies or gets injured, we can recover them. Satellite telemetry will help us to know the cause of death and prevent other vultures dying from that cause.”

The satellite tags will also be useful in discoverin­g whether the captive-bred birds behave normally in the wild with other closely-related species.

In the first event of its kind in South Asia, the government of Nepal and national and internatio­nal conservati­on organisati­ons released critically endangered white-backed vultures in the wild on November 9, 2017.

India is home to nine species of vultures. Three of these species, the white-backed, longbilled and slender-billed vultures, underwent catastroph­ic population declines of greater than 90% in the mid-1990s.

The birds are now listed as critically endangered. The vulture, a nature’s scavenger, cleans the environmen­t of animal carcasses. Villagers rely on them to dispose of cattle carcasses.

According to biologists, the reason for bringing the vultures to the brink of extinction in South Asia is mainly to the extensive use of diclofenac in treating cattle. Vultures that ate the carcass of animals treated with diclofenac died with symptoms of kidney failure.

The Indian government banned its veterinary use in 2006.

BNHS scientist Prakash said “if there is no toxicity-related death of these eight birds in two years, then we will go for release of 20-25 birds each year”.

“We are planning to introduce 100 pairs each of the three species of white-backed, longbilled and slender-billed in the wild in the next 10 years. Before that, findings from the first proposed release batch will be crucial in the future programmes.”

The long-billed and slenderbil­led vultures will be released in Madhya Pradesh and Assam, respective­ly.

Officials admit the flight to freedom of these endangered vultures is still caught in bureaucrat­ic delays in the Haryana Forest Department, which has been authorised to procure 10 platform terminal transmitte­rs or satellite telemetrie­s through global bidding.

“These birds have been shifted to the pre-release aviary for over a year-and-a-half. Twice their release was postponed last year. The only hurdle is the procuremen­t of satellite telemetrie­s and that too is bogged down by bureaucrat­ic delays,” an official, requesting anonymity, told IANS.

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