DANGPLAT, Cambodia (AP) — A wake of vultures perches on the
bare branches of a towering tree, dark shapes silhouetted against a
pale sky, sharp beaks and talons ready to tear apart a dead cow laid
out in a Cambodian jungle clearing.
Vultures pause while having meal, a dead cow, in Dangplat, Cambodia. Pic: AP. |
This manmade “vulture restaurant” is part of efforts across Asia to
save the critically endangered bird from extinction. Now there are
tentative signs they may be paying off.
The population of vultures in Cambodia has doubled to 300 from as
few as 150 in 2004. In India, they are still dying off, but their rate
of decline has fallen.
These super scavengers may be regarded as messengers of death and
doom, but in Asia, it is they who have suffered one of the natural
world’s greatest population crashes of recent times.
From tens of millions, numbers of the three main species have
plummeted to well below 60,000, says British expert Richard Cuthbert.
They have gone extinct in several countries, including Thailand,
Vietnam and Laos, and are still declining outside of Cambodia.
While the greatest losses have been in Asia, most vultures outside
the region are also deemed critically endangered or threatened.
Scientists say they will probably never fully revive; they were once
so numerous in Cambodia that airplanes had to dodge flocks of them.
But some reasons for hope have emerged.
In South Asia, the decline of the oriental white-backed vulture has
been slowed by a ban on the use of a painkiller in livestock.
Diclofenac, widely prescribed by veterinarians in India, Pakistan and
Nepal, proved fatal to vultures, which died of acute kidney failure
after eating the carcasses of animals treated with it.
In India, they were as part of the landscape as the cows
nonchalantly wandering the streets, helping to prevent the spread of
disease by vacuuming up carrion. Their decline has been so catastrophic
that the Parsis, a religious group that offered their dead to vultures
on raised platforms — the “towers of silence” — now must use giant
solar reflectors to speed up the decomposition of corpses.
“I’d say we are on the border of a red-orange alert as far as
extinction. There is some improvement but we have a long way to go,”
says Cuthbert, the principal conservation scientist of the Royal
Society for the Protection of Birds.
A study published in May showed the proportion of cattle carcasses
in India contaminated with diclofenac dropped by more than 40 percent
in the two years after the ban was introduced in 2006, Cuthbert said.
The annual rate of decline for the white-backed vulture is estimated to
be about 18 percent, down from 40 percent before the ban.
But the human form of the drug — an anti-inflammatory medicine — is
still often used by veterinarians, with some pharmaceutical companies
even offering convenient, “cow-sized” doses.
India, Nepal and Pakistan have set up breeding centers, hoping to
release chicks when the environment is deemed safer. They also have
vulture restaurants, which offer drug-free carcasses. Nepal launched a
10-year Saving Asia’s Vultures from Extinction program this year and
declared a number of diclofenac-free zones.
The drug is rarely used for livestock in Southeast Asia. “We’re
trying hard to take steps to make sure it doesn’t enter the food
chain,” says Jonathan Charles Eames, regional head for Britain-based
BirdLife International.
The greatest threat here has been a loss of food: falling stocks of
wild mammals, because of hunting, and of free-roaming cattle as farmers
turn to more intensive husbandry and fear theft of their beasts.
“Before 1970, when I was young there were so many vultures in this
area. I could see them wherever I went,” recalled 82-year-old Pha Noung
in the northern Cambodian village of Dangplat, pointing his finger in
every direction. “Then almost none. Now, some are coming back.”
Down a forest track near his village, the New York-based Wildlife
Conservation Society has set up one of six spots in Cambodia where
vultures are given food and thus can also be more easily counted. The
World Wide Fund for Nature, BirdLife International and the Cambodian
government are partners in the nationwide effort.
Song Chansocheat, a Wildlife Conservation Society project manager,
says villagers now have a stake in preserving the vulture. They are
hired at $2.50 a day to protect nests. They also earn income from
foreign bird watching groups, setting up their tent sites and selling
them food for the vulture restaurants — including old or injured cows
at up to $200 a head.
But an increasing number of vultures are dying of poisons used by
hunters to kill fish and jungle animals, while loggers continue to
destroy nesting habitat. Impoverished villagers also sometimes eat
decomposing, possibly diseased, cows found in the forests, leaving less
for vultures, Song Chansocheat says.
So the restaurants are seen as vital, the bleached, meatless rib cages and skulls, evidence of feasts past.
Recently, as the forests woke up to the chatter and songs of other
birds, vultures settled on tree branches above the cow, killed a day
earlier. Others, high above, rode the thermals in graceful circles.
From a high watchtower, ranger En Sophal peered through his
binoculars, smiled and took notes: “50 white-backed, 11-red-headed, 6
slender-billed: 67 vultures sighted.”
Source: AP
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