WELCOME

Dear All,

This blog, Conserving Vultures, has been created in order to keep you aware and updated regarding status and conservation initiatives of Critically Endangered vulture species in South Asia. In recent years, vulture populations throughout the range states have undergone dramatic declines in numbers, > 90 %, due to contamination of veterinary drug Diclofenac in their food cycle.

Lets join our hands to conserve these noble birds from the verge of extinction.

Dr Sagar Paudel
sagar@birdlifenepal.org


Friday, September 9, 2011

3rd International Vulture Awareness Day celebrated in Nepal


3rd International Vulture Awareness Day was celebrated on 3 September 2011 in Nepal and around the world. On this occasion, BCN organised several events at various part of the country: Kathmandu, Palpa, Kaski, Chitwan to Kanchanpur districts. Conservation awareness rallies, awareness campaigns; awareness workshops; interaction and talk programs; awareness through FM radio;Bombax sps.(Simal) plantation, street drama were carried out throughout the country in coordination and collaboration with Department of National Parks and Wildlife conservation (DNPWC), Department of Livestock Service (DLS), National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC), World Wildlife Fund (WWF), veterinary communities, community forest user groups and other local CBOs and NGOs.
Vulture Conservation Awareness and Raptor Observation Program was organised at Kakani, Nuwakot on 3 September 2011. Raptor observation was done in landfill site, Okharpauwain order to observe the decline of vultures and overall raptors in comparision with the past population. During this event, Mr. Hari Saran Nepali “Kazi”. Founder president of BCN shared his experiences and briefed about the causes of decline of vultures. Similarly, Dr. Hum Gurung, Chief Executive Officer, BCN highlighted on need of Environmental Education to public for biodiversity conservation. Mr. Mohan Chandra Bishwakarma, Vulture Conservation Officer informed participants about vultures, their role in nature, causes of decline, conservation measures being done in Nepal and Mr. Juddha Bahadur Gurung, Member secretary, NTNC focused on role of youth in conservation.  Mr. Shree Ram Subedi, President, BCN encouraged everyone to join their hand together for conservation of vultures.
The first Saturday of September each year is celebrated as International Vulture Awareness Day across the globe. The purpose of this day celebration is to create awareness of the continued plight of all vulture species and highlight the work done by conservationists. In Nepal this day is being celebrated since first international event in 2009. 





Source: www.birdlifenepal.org

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Future of vultures still hang in Balance


India’s pharmacies flout diclofenac ban but vulture breeding centres have best year yets

India’s pharmacies flout diclofenac ban but vulture breeding centres have best year yet
White-rumped Vulture (J C Eames)


A study published in the journal Oryx has found that over a third of Indian pharmacies continue to sell diclofenac to livestock farmers. Manufacture and sale of the drug for veterinary use has been banned in India since 2006, because of its toxicity to Critically Endangered vultures.
Farmers are purchasing widely-available human diclofenac illegally in conveniently large bottles to treat their cattle.  But some diclofenac on sale was formulated for veterinary use, and had been manufactured illegally after the 2006 ban.
Diclofenac is responsible for bringing three South Asian species of Gyps vultures to the brink of extinction.  The population crash was first noted in the late 1990s.
Nepal and Pakistan also banned diclofenac in 2006. Further measures in India, in 2008, placed additional restrictions on diclofenac for animal use, with contravention punishable with imprisonment.
The research was conducted in over 250 veterinary and general pharmacy shops in 11 Indian states from November 2007 – June 2010. The surveyors asked if they could buy non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for treating cattle. Diclofenac was recorded in 36% of shops.
Lead author and principal conservation scientist at the RSPB (BirdLife in the UK), Dr Richard Cuthbert said, “The ban is still quite easy to avoid because human formulations are for sale in large vials, which are clearly not intended for human use.  Preventing misuse of human diclofenac remains the main challenge in halting the decline of threatened vultures.”
Encouragingly, the research also shows an increase in meloxicam (in 70% of pharmacies), a drug with very similar therapeutic effects to diclofenac on cattle, but which has been proven to be safe to vultures.
There is also evidence that untested drugs such as nimesulide are more widely available in the market. The effects of these drugs on vultures are as yet unknown. Ketoprofen, an alternative that has been tested and shown to be deadly to vultures, has still not been banned.  It was on sale for veterinary use in 29% of pharmacies.
The report’s co-author, Dr Vibhu Prakash of BirdLife Partner the Bombay Natural History Society said, “While the increase in meloxicam brands and availability is encouraging, firm action at Government level against pharmaceutical companies and pharmacies that are breaking the law by manufacturing and selling diclofenac for veterinary use is urgently needed if we are to save vultures from extinction.”
In contrast to these disheartening results, 2011 has been the most successful year yet at the Indian captive breeding centres. The number of fledged chicks is almost double last year’s.  Eighteen vulture chicks were successfully reared,  15 at the Pinjore centre in Haryana, and the remaining three at Rajabhat Khawa in West Bengal.
Four fledged birds were a direct result of ‘double clutches’: some pairs produced a second egg after the first was removed, hatched in incubators and reared by BNHS staff.
BNHS, with support from the RSPB and newly-formed consortium Saving Asia’s Vultures from Extinction (SAVE), manages three conservation breeding centres in India, where 271 vultures are housed, and successful breeding of all three species has now occurred. There are also conservation breeding centres linked to the SAVE programme in Nepal and Pakistan.
Chris Bowden, Head of the RSPB’s vulture programme and SAVE spokesperson said, “ With the latest success at the breeding centres, we’re more confident than ever that there will be sufficient numbers for reintroduction to the wild as soon as it’s safe. But until production and sale of veterinary diclofenac is stopped, we cannot guarantee these birds have any future in the wild.”

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Invitation on Vulture Conservation Awareness and Raptor Observation Programme


BCN would like to invite our members to participate in the Vulture Conservation Awareness and Raptor Observation Programme going to be organised on the occasion of Third International Vulture Awareness Day on 3 September 2011.
Please find detail of the programme as below:
Date: 3 September 2011, Saturday
Venue: Kakani, Kathmandu
Meeting place: BCN office, Uttardhoka, Lazimpat
Time: 8:00 am (sharp)
Note: Transportation and lunch will be provided by BCN.
Please confirm your participation by tomorrow, 2 September 2011, Friday before 12:00 pm.
We look forward for your participation on the programme.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

A Day for Vultures

In order to raise awareness for vulture conservation and educate the public about the threats facing these noble and majestic birds, September 3, 2011 has been designated as International Vulture Awareness Day.

Why is there an awareness day for vultures?

Vultures are an ecologically vital group of birds that face a range of threats in many areas that they occur. Vultures worldwide are under tremendous threat – and three species of Gyps vulture are now in danger of extinction.

Gyps vultures in the Indian subcontinent have undergone dramatic decline in numbers since the mid of 1990s, with decline in excess of 97% for three Gyps species. The vultures were the victims of widespread poisoning by use of Diclofenac in livestock.

Critically endangered Gyps vultures:
·         White-backed/White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis)
·         Slender-billed Vulture (Gyps tenuirostris)
·         Indian Vulture/Long-billed Vulture (Gyps indicus).

The International Vulture Awareness Day has grown from Vulture Awareness Days run by the Birds of Prey Programme in South Africa and the Hawk Conservancy Trust in England, who decided to work together and expand the initiative into an international event.
It is now recognised that a co-ordinated international day will publicise the conservation of vultures to a wider audience and highlight the important work being carried out by the world’s vulture conservationists.
Bird Conservation Nepal ( www.birdlifenepal.org) is organizing various national and local events to celebrate IVAD 2011.

We're going BIG this year!

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Nepal's 'restaurant' for vultures


By Charles Haviland 
BBC News, Nawalparasi, Nepal
Vultures in Nepal
The birds resemble a 'grotesque gathering of clergymen'

As the early morning mist lifts on the farmlands at the edge of the jungle, Yam Bahadur Nepali embarks on a job which many would find difficult but which, for him, is a regular chore.
He wheels his tricycle cart to collect the carcass of an old and sick cow which died during the night. It is to be fed to the vultures, under a unique initiative to conserve the scavenging birds. It is called the "vulture restaurant".
With some difficulty Yam Bahadur and his wife wheel the heavy beast past houses and down across wet paddy fields to the vulture feeding area.
The "restaurant" is a big grassy area surrounded by tall, fragrant sal trees. The peaceful scene is broken only by the cattle skeletons scattered around - and the vultures nestled above.
'Kidney failure'
Nepali ornithologists have established it as a place where vultures can eat healthily.
Two of the seven vulture species in the Indian subcontinent - slender-billed and white-rumped - have declined catastrophically in number and are now endangered, explained ornithologist Dhan Bahadur "DB" Chaudhary.
DB Chaudhary
 [Vultures] are ugly looking, but they are really helpful for us 
Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary, Nepali ornithologist
"In 1997 in eastern parts of Nepal there were about 67 nests," he says. "And in four or five years, in 2001, there was zero.
"So that rapidly they declined from India, Nepal and Pakistan. And over 12 years they started declining - now more than 95% of the vultures' number has gone down."
Scientists recently pinpointed the cause - the drug, diclofenac.
Farmers often give it to their cows as a painkiller. But if the cows die soon afterwards, the drug is deadly for the vultures which feed on their flesh. Mr Chaudhary says they rapidly die of kidney failure and gout.
As Hem Sagar Baral, executive director of Bird Conservation Nepal (BCN) explains, Nepal and India have now banned diclofenac because it was harming the vultures. It has been replaced by a safe drug called meloxicam.
"It is also anti-inflammatory but has been tested against vultures and other birds of prey and general birds and does not cause damage to these birds," he says.
'Massive creature'
As Yam Bahadur skins the carcass, we go into a spacious, brand-new observation hide. With us are several of the villagers who serve as volunteers on the project committee. We watch as the vultures wait.
After half an hour we are still waiting. A stray dog starts feeding on the carcass but seems worried and keeps barking.
Cattle carcass on a rickshaw
The 'restaurant' has no shortage of food suppliers
The birds gain confidence and 22 of them land, still just watching the dog. Nearly all are the endangered White-rumped Vultures but there is also a massive creature - the biggest, the Himalayan Griffon Vulture.
They look like a rather grotesque gathering of clergymen with their blackish coats and white "collars".
Then, suddenly, they close in on the cow's corpse. It is like a rugby scrum of vultures, all wanting to gorge on the carcass, fighting with each other, the strongest in front, the weaker behind.
One vulture attacks another which has a long strand of raw meat dangling from its mouth, already half-swallowed.
The scavenging birds jump clumsily around, their wings outstretched. I tell Mr Chaudhary I think they are truly ugly animals.
"Yes, they are ugly looking, but they are really helpful for us," he says. "See - within half an hour they finished eating all that dead animal. Only the skeleton is left. It is really helpful to clean the nature."
Nepalis even nickname these birds "kuchikar", meaning a broom.
The villagers on the project's committee are engrossed by the spectacle. One is a woman farmer, Tila Devi Bhusal.
'Preserve them'
"Traditionally we see the vulture as a very bad bird," she says. "If it passes your house, then the house has to be purified. They can bring danger.
"But that belief is disappearing. People realise that vultures eat rotten things and we must preserve them."
The vulture restaurant has many volunteers but only two full-time employees.
One is Yam Bahadur who looks after the cows when they are living, not only when they die.
Vultures in Nepal
The birds bide their time before pouncing
The project buys elderly or sick cows from farmers, looks after them humanely and treats them, if necessary, with the safe drug, meloxicam.
The cows, considered sacred by Hindus, die a natural death.
The other employee is Ishwari Chaudhary, the educational officer. He is spreading the vulture conservation message among villagers and in veterinary shops.
"We tell them about the new medicine, meloxicam, and how we can save the birds by using it," he says.
The banned drug diclofenac is still being rounded up all over Nepal. Meloxicam is more expensive, but it is injected in much smaller doses which partly compensates.
The numbers of endangered vultures are rising again.
Mr Chaudhary says that before the project was opened, he used to see a maximum of 72 vultures around one carcass.
"Once we established the vulture restaurant, in five or six months we found double that number - the maximum number I have recorded is about 156, all at the same time on the same carcass."
BCN, with support from others like Britain's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, now wants to open more "vulture restaurants" - and scientists in India too are now showing interest in the idea.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Masters of sky are facing extinction

Vultures,once the masters of sky, are in the verge of extinction. They are the efficient scavengers of nature and occupy a crucial ecological niche that helps in maintaining a healthy and natural environment.

Vultures play important role in maintaining clean environment through rapid consumption of animal carcasses and human dead bodies in the form of sky burials within Nepal and Tibet. Nine different species of vultures have been recorded from South Asia. Nepal supports six resident vulture species (white-rumped vulture Gyps bengalensis, slender-billed vulture Gyps tenuirostris, Egyptian vulture Neophron percnopterus, red-headed vulture Sarcogyps calvus, Himalayan griffon vulture Gyps himalayensis, and Lammergeier Gypaetus barbatus), one winter visitor (Cinereous vulture Aegypius monachus) and one passage migrant (Eurasian griffon vulture Gyps fulvus). They help man to dispose of carcasses when their animals die. They have a robust digestive system, allowing them to digest disease causing bacteria found in rotting meat. Vultures prevent outbreak and spread of infectious disease such as anthrax, foot and mouth disease and rabies.

The vulture decline in India was first quantified at Keoladeo National Park, Rajasthan, by Dr. Vibhu Prakash, Principal Scientist of the Bombay Natural History Society. Between 1985-1986 and 1996-1997 the population size of Oriental white-backed vultures declined by an estimated 97% at Keoladeo, and in 2003 this colony was extinct. These declines were coupled with high mortality of all age classes. In 2000 BNHS teams undertook over 11,000 km of road based surveys, repeating 6,000 km of road-transects previously surveyed for raptors in the early 1990s, and confirmed that declines of >92% had occurred in all regions across northern India. Results from field surveys inidicate that in 2007 population of white-rumped vultures was crashed by more than 99.9% in comparison to numbers recorded in 1991-1993. (Prakash et al. 2007). Across South Asia tens of millions of vultures have now died. Monitoring of breeding numbers of vultures in Pakistan also indicated similar levels of decline, with white rumped vultures declining by more than 99% from 2000 to 2006 (The Peregrine Fund 2007). Similarly, in Nepal studies show 16%annual decline in white rumped vultures from 2002 to 2009(BCN research).

The main reason for their decline is a veterinary painkiller “DICLOFENAC”. It was used as a non steroidal anti inflammatory drug in cattle and other domestic animals. The residues of the drug remain in the dead body of animal and if the vultures consume this carcass within 72 hours of Diclofenac administration then they die because of severe uric acid accumulation on their vital organs and kidney failure.