Houbara conservation uplifts people’s lives in 17 countries
UAE PROGRAMME BOOSTS SOCIO-ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AROUND PROTECTED AREAS
Along-term effort to protect an endangered bird has helped improve lives of many villagers in 17 countries, according to a senior official.
The UAE has been carrying out an ambitious programme since the 1970s to conserve the houbara bustard, a large-bodied bird, with long legs and a slender neck that has been synonymous with Arab culture and an integral part of traditional Emirati hunting.
This programme has helped socio-economic development around protected areas in the bird’s range countries, from Morocco to Mongolia, a top official told Gulf News on Sunday.
“The houbara conservation programme has made a positive impact on ecosystems [in those countries]. The life comes back easily there and flora and fauna grow up, which helps improve the agriculture [in the surrounding areas]. This enriches the livelihood of farmers and farmworkers,” said Dr Thani Bin Ahmad Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of Climate Change and Environment.
The houbara habitats are hotspots of recreational hunting that have augmented ecotourism, offering opportunities of jobs and enterprises for local communities, he said on the sidelines of an international summit yesterday on the conservation of the houbara in Abu Dhabi, organised by the UAE’s International Fund for Houbara Conservation (IFHC).
The IFHC’s three breeding centres in Abu Dhabi, Morocco and Kazakhstan breed 50,000 houbaras a year and release them into the wild. “We give them back to nature,” Al Zeyoudi said.
The minister inaugurated the summit attended by over 70 delegates representing 17 range countries, who discussed ways to further preserve the species. “The UAE’s wise leadership has been making efforts to achieve a balance between economic and social development, and the preservation of cultural, social and environmental heritage,” Al Zeyoudi said in his inaugural speech.
Mohammad Bin Ahmad Al Bowardi, Minister of State for Defence Affairs and deputy chairman of the IFHC, said the IFHC has managed to breed more than 400,000 birds and more than 300,000 birds have been released in the wild so far. ■
houbaras currently bred by three breeding centres a year
houbara bustards so far reared by the breeding centres
The houbara conservation programme has made a positive impact on ecosystems …. The life comes back easily there and flora and fauna grow up, which helps improve the agriculture….”
Dr Thani Bin Ahmad Al Zeyoudi | Minister of Climate Change and Environment
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Majid Al Mansouri, IFHC’s managing director, said: “This is the first ever gathering of senior officials from across the range of the houbara. The challenges we face are ones shared ■ across the species’ range, and only through collective international efforts can we reach our ultimate objective to provide a sustainable future for the houbara in the wild,” he said.