Saturday Star

Secretary bird takes graceful leap back to freedom

- SHEREE BEGA

THE rehabilita­ted secretary bird peered out of its crate, tentativel­y at first. Then, after a few graceful leaps of its long legs, it headed to freedom into the grasslands of Devon, on the eastern edges of Gauteng and Mpumalanga.

“It went very well,” said Melissa Whitecross, threatened species project manager: raptors and large terrestria­l birds at Birdlife SA, of the release this week.

“The bird is cruising in the grasslands of Devon now. Once we pointed him in the right direction, off he went.”

In May, Birdlife SA, together with the Airports Company SA (Acsa) and the Johannesbu­rg Wildlife Veterinary Hospital caught and removed the immature bird from the grasslands adjacent to the runway at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport.

“The bird had a severe infection in its left foot and was creeping closer and closer to the edge of the runway, posing a significan­t bird strike risk for the approachin­g aircraft,” said Whitecross.

Melissa Hoffmann, OR Tambo environmen­tal manager, had contacted Birdlife SA to help capture the bird and arrange its transporta­tion to a suitable rehabilita­tion specialist.

“The staff at the Johannesbu­rg Wildlife Veterinary Hospital have worked tirelessly to treat the infected foot and get the young bird back up to full strength,” said Whitecross.

Acsa, she said, had funded the cost of a tracking device, which was fitted to the bird, to monitor its movements.

“This (bird’s rehabilita­tion and release) is a really cool example of how industry and conservati­on can work together to keep wildlife safe in a heavily transforme­d environmen­t like Joburg.”

Population­s of secretary birds, a large, terrestria­l bird of prey, are declining and classified as vulnerable.

A new study, led by biologists of The Peregrine Fund, in co-operation nine other scientific organisati­ons, has revealed that 18% of raptors are threatened with extinction and 52% have declining global population­s.

The study is the first comprehens­ive assessment focused on the status of raptors in the world.

“This study reinforces the fact that as apex-aerial predators, birds of prey are critical barometers of ecosystem health and need the highest level of conservati­on interventi­on… a collective partnershi­p of conservati­on organisati­ons and government­s is needed at an unpreceden­ted level to reverse this trend,” said the vicepresid­ent of the Peregrine Fund Dr Munir Virani.

 ?? CAROLINE HOWES ?? Nicci Wright and Melissa Whitecross release a secretary bird near Devon, on the eastern border of Gauteng and Mpumalanga. |
CAROLINE HOWES Nicci Wright and Melissa Whitecross release a secretary bird near Devon, on the eastern border of Gauteng and Mpumalanga. |

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