June 25, 2012
While vultures across Asia have become nearly
extinct in the past few decades, the vultures of Cambodia have
persisted. Conservationists say that the creation of new vulture
“restaurants” and the restoration of depleted wildlife species in
Southeast Asia are the next important steps needed to ensure a future
for these ecologically valuable scavengers. Credit: A. Michaud
In face of what has become a precipitous slide toward
extinction across the Asian continent, the vultures of Cambodia have
persisted, giving conservationists hope that these important scavengers
can come back from the brink, according to authors from the Wildlife
Conservation Society, the Royal Government of Cambodia, and other groups
in a new study.
The creation of new feeding stations, or vulture "restaurants," and the restoration of populations of depleted wildlife species represent the next important steps in vulture conservation, the study says.
The paper appears in the online edition of Bird Conservation International. Authors include: Tom Clements, Martin Gilbert, and Hugo J. Rainey of the Wildlife Conservation Society;
Richard Cuthbert of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds;
Jonathan C. Eames of BirdLife International in Indochina; Pech Bunnat
and Song Chansocheat of the Ministry of the Environment, Royal
Government of Cambodia; Seng Teak of the World Wide Fund for
Nature—Cambodia Program; and Tan Setha of the Ministry of Agriculture,
Forestry, and Fisheries, Royal Government of Cambodia.
"Results from vulture censuses from the past several years have been
encouraging, with new nests recorded and even population increases,"
said WCS researcher Tom Clements, lead author on the new paper. "With
continued investment, these critical populations can survive and grow."
In the study, which began in 2004, the authors collected data from
several sites in Cambodia, Lao PDR, and Vietnam through a variety of
methods, including monitoring of vulture nesting sites and feeding
stations; health assessments of vultures; interviews with government
officials, hunters, and wildlife traders to collect data on threats; and
satellite transmitter vests on four birds to assess ranging patterns.
The findings: while Cambodia's vulture populations remain robust, the
use of poison by hunters and fishers for capturing other species are
leading to unintended vulture mortalities. According to the data, 74
percent of the 42 recorded mortalities during the study period were
attributable to poison. Direct persecution (the shooting of vultures
with guns and slingshots) was also significant, accounting for 10
percent of recorded vulture mortality.
The extreme importance of Cambodia's vulture population was created
by an ecological disaster across Asia due largely to the veterinary drug
diclofenac. Widely used as an anti-inflammatory drug for cattle in
South Asia, diclofenac is toxic to vultures, causing death through renal
failure and visceral gout to birds that feed on the cattle carcasses.
It has led to a global population declines higher than 99 percent in
some vulture species.
So far, the drug has not impacted the vulture populations of Cambodia
because diclofenac is not used. WCS and other partners have actually
recorded increases in some species of vulture in these areas. However,
vultures in Cambodia are largely dependent on domestic animals for food,
as populations of wild species such as gaur and Eld's deer remain low.
"Fortunately, the Royal Government of Cambodia has instituted
measures to ban diclofenac to ensure the survival of these important
birds," said Joe Walston, Director of WCS's Asia Program. "The challenge
now is to reduce the indirect and direct persecution of vultures,
specifically from poisoning and shooting, and longer-term pressures from
habitat loss."
The slender-billed vulture, white-rumped vulture, and red-headed
vulture are all listed as "Critically Endangered" by the International
Union for Conservation of Nature.
Provided by
Wildlife Conservation Society
2 comments:
Vulture is a recycling creature. Without them there would be so much diseases.
We should train them to eat the traitors dead or alive at
midnight !!! They are smart at detecting the smell of
those infidels!
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