China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Vultures fight for their survival after drug devastates numbers

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CHANGA MANGA, Pakistan — Once a common sight in the skies of Pakistan, today the white-backed vulture is facing extinction — its population devastated by the use of industrial drugs to breed the cattle whose carcasses they traditiona­lly feed on.

Bird numbers have plummeted by more than 99 percent since the 1990s, according to the local branch of the World Wildlife Fund, which is attempting to ensure the species does not die out.

“Once vultures were found in a very good number in Pakistan,” said Warda Javed, coordinato­r for the WWF backed Vulture Restoratio­n Project.

But due to several threats — principall­y the use of the antiinflam­matory drug Diclofenac, which causes kidney failure the birds are dying out.

In a vast screened enclosure in the eastern forest of Changa Manga, about 100 kilometers from Pakistan’s cultural capital Lahore, some 20 Gyps Bengalensi­s — or the whitebacke­d vultures — wait patiently for their dinner, traditiona­lly made of donkey and goat meat.

With plumage of white and ash gray, their powerful beaks fitted to long pink necks, they watch from their wooden perches, some 10 meters above the ground. They boast a wingspan of 2 meters and weigh up to 7.5 kilograms.

Locked up, at least they are safe: The goal is to keep the species alive until outside conditions improve enough for them to be released.

Diclofenac is used as a painkiller by livestock breeders in Pakistan. Vultures consume the meat off the carcasses of the cattle and so ingest the drugs, which wreak havoc with their systems.

Symbols of death

The WWF is lobbying authoritie­s, veterinari­ans and pharmaceut­ical companies for the replacemen­t of Diclofenac with an alternativ­e, Meloxicam, which is safer for the birds.

Diclofenac was banned in neighborin­g India in 2006 after it was also blamed for destroying the vulture population there, which went from millions to just a few thousand in little more than a decade, but it remains in use in Pakistan.

At the Vulture Restoratio­n Project in Changa Manga, they are playing the long game.

Four vulture babies were born in the last two years through the centre’s breeding program, but it will be years before they are released into the wild.

“Up till 2020, we don’t have any release plans until we have a controlled environmen­t outside this center as well,” Javed said, warning that even if Diclofenac is banned in Pakistan, other drugs used in cattle breeding can cause problems for the birds.

There are eight species of vultures in Pakistan, two of which — the white-backed vulture and the Indian vulture — are critically endangered.

Principall­y scavengers that feast on carcasses, the birds have long been associated with death, an issue compounded on the Indian subcontine­nt as they have also been used to dispose of human remains as part of the centuries-old tradition of Dakhma, the funeral process of the Zoroastria­n community known as the Parsees.

 ?? AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? White-backed vultures in their enclosure at a conservati­on center in Changa Manga, Pakistan.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE White-backed vultures in their enclosure at a conservati­on center in Changa Manga, Pakistan.

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