Once widely spotted across 11 States, the Great Indian
Bustard is currently listed under the category of Critically Endangered
birds, in the 2013 ‘Threatened Bird’ list by the International Union
for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
There are less than 250 bustards left in the country. The erosion of its habitat is a major threat to the bird’s survival.
“There
has been no attempt to promote conservation through the local
community,” says Dr. Pramod Patil, from the Bombay Natural History
Society (BNHS).
The IUCN list includes 145 birds
across the country. Three of the species named in its critically
endangered list — the Pink-headed Duck, Jerdon’s Courser and Siberian
Crane — are on the verge of extinction.
In
Maharashtra, the Great Indian Bustard was seen across the State a few
years ago. Now, it has been reduced to only three districts —
Chandrapur, Nagpur and Solapur.
The change of land
use from grassland to farmland has been a major threat since it has
shrunk the bird’s habitat. Poaching is another key problem.
Though
the State has set up a massive 8,500 sq km bustard sanctuary, it proved
to be ineffective. It was much larger than required and blocked several
projects, turning locals against the sanctuary.
In
Chandrapur, the government issued an order which prevented farmers from
selling their land if the bustard was seen on it. “Instead of reporting
the sighting of the bustard, some farmers chose to kill the bird. The
government should declare incentives for spotting bustards, not
threats,” said Dr. Patil.
According to sources, the State Environment Ministry is in the process of rectifying the circular.
Another
Critically Endangered bird on the list is the Forest Owlet, found in
Maharashtra’s Satpuda mountain range where teak trees are in abundance.
The bird is seen primarily in Melghat area.
“Continuous
depletion of teak trees from these hills has become a major problem for
this bird,” said Dr. Raju Kasambe, Project Manager from BNHS.
According
to reports by various NGOs working in the area, the Yaval sanctuary in
Jalgaon district has lost up to 1700 hectares of forest to land mafias.
This was the main habitat of the Forest Owlet. “Saving forests is the
only way of saving this bird. You cannot have breeding programmes to
compensate for shifting them out of their original habitat,” said Dr.
Kasambe.
In fact, habitat destruction is the main
reason why the birds end up in the IUCN list, according to Dr. Patil.
“At a time when land use is changing so rapidly, it is impossible for
any scientific conservation effort to go without community
participation. Only joint effort can bring success,” he said.
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