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Latest News and Information (2005)
Future grim for
the Houbara Bustard
PESHAWAR: The Houbara
Bustard is facing increasing threat of extinction due to
excessive hunting, poaching and encroachments on its habitat,
experts said.
This migratory bird arrives every year in Pakistan in November
and December from Mongolia, Siberia and central Asian republics.
According to a study, its population is rapidly declining in
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, India, UAE and Middle East
countries.
The Asian Houbara could be extinct within 15 to 25 years if
unchecked hunting, illegal trapping and trading of the bird
continued at the existing scale, said the study conducted by the
Environment Research and Wild life Development Agency (ERWDA).
ERWDA estimated that the natural death rate of the bird was 3.28
percent while death due to hunting accounted for more than 73
percent. The rate of hunting has reached nearly 20.8 percent,
dangerously exceeding the acceptable 7.2 percent.
Because of the increased hunting of the bird, especially in its
winter habitats, the Convention on the International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) has classified it as an endangered
migratory bird. The Houbara Bustard is also listed in the
Convention on Migratory Species of Wild Animals, which is known
as the Bonn Convention. The World Conservation Union has put it
in the ‘Near Threatened’ category.
“If the present situation continues, the number of these birds
will be reduced by 50 percent by 2015 and they could be extinct
by 2027,” the study said. “There is a gradual decrease in the
number of Houbara birds coming to Pakistan each year,” Dr Mumtaz
Malik, the chief conservator Wildlife, NWFP, said.
Rivalry between the Houbara’s newborns is also one of the
factors in their decrease, he said. “The Houbara gives birth to
only two offspring a year but the elder one kills the younger
sibling due to the fear of having to share food,” Dr Mumtaz
said. According to Dr Mumtaz, the enthusiasm of NGOs interested
in preserving the endangered species has been on the decline.
Lt Col Shams Ernest, spokesman of the Houbara Bustard
International Foundation (HBIF), Lahore, said that all arid
areas in Punjab, Sindh and Balochistan were the Houbara’s winter
habitat.
“The bird is being artificial bred in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and
Morocco. But it has to be done under extremely controlled
conditions and is very expensive,” he said. This desert bird
migrates to Pakistan in winter and leaves in April and May, said
Yar Muhammad Khan, a former official of NWFP Wildlife, Fisheries
and Forests Department. Covering a distance of about 4,500 to
5,000 kilometres, the Houbara journeys from central Asia and
Siberia at altitudes of 300 to 500 feet and lands in Bahawalpur,
Rahimyar Khan and the arid areas of Sindh and Balochistan, Khan
said. The bird eats flora, insects and earthworms. “The Houbara
is very sensitive and does not use the same route again if it
senses any danger on its way during the first journey. If the
Houbara looses its mate, it takes three to five years to find a
new one,” Khan said. The bird travels in groups with one chief.
If they loose their chief, the deputy guides the group to its
destination. “Approximately 500 to 2,000 Houbara are trapped
each year with the help of falcons, nets and other means in the
arid areas of Sindh, Punjab and Balochistan. If the hunting
continued, the Houbara population will vanish in a decade or
so,” Khan said.
Dr Mumtaz recommended community involvement through financial
and other incentives in preservation and protection of the
Houbara Bustard. app.
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