Endangered vultures sighted in Raichur
The Hindu : Sci-Tech / Energy & Environment : Endangered vultures sighted in Raichur
 
 
Endangered vultures sighted in Raichur
The Hindu A group of long-billed vultures on a hill on the Bellary-Raichur border in Karnataka. Photo; Sunaina Martin. 
A team of naturalists from Bellary, including Santosh  Martin, honorary wildlife warden of Bellary district; K.S. Abdul Samad  of the Society for Wildlife and Nature (SWaN); and Anand Kundargi,  naturalist from Siruguppa, have discovered the long-billed vulture (Gyps  indicus), a critically endangered species.
Sixteen  of these vultures, along with four Egyptian vultures, were sighted in a  remote village bordering Bellary and Raichur districts of Karnataka.
“Our  umpteen expeditions to discover the vultures for the past several years  have at last yielded fruit. Every time we get a report of sighting of  the vulture by the locals, with whom we are in regular touch, we used to  rush and scan the entire area, only to be disappointed. But on Sunday  we were lucky. Based on the information given by the locals, that they  had seen a group of vultures feeding on a sheep carcass in a field, we  reached the spot and were awestruck to see as many as 16 vultures  sitting on a hill, an ideal habitat,” Mr. Martin told The Hindu.
The  long billed vulture, closely related to the Griffon Vulture (G.  fulvus), breeds mainly on hilly crags in central and peninsular India.  Like other vultures, it is a scavenger, feeding mostly on carcasses. It  often moves in flocks.
Mr. Martin, while expecting a  healthy population of around 25 vultures in the vicinity, did not wish  to disclose the actual location, apprehending a threat to the birds at  this stage.
The vulture population has been on the  decline and the reason is said to be poisoning caused by Diclofenac, a  veterinary drug. The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug is given to  animals to reduce joint pain and poses a threat to the lives vultures  consuming the carcass of the animal administered with the drug.
“The  discovery of a flourishing population of vultures in north Karnataka  throws a ray of hope for the conservation of the critically endangered  vultures. Now it is our responsibility to conserve the bird and its  habitat,” Mr. Samad said, adding that SWaN and Wildlife SOS, New Delhi,  were planning to take up a research project on the distribution and  ecology of vultures in north Karnataka.
Budding naturalist Sunaina Martin and Sonia Martin, a nature lover, had accompanied the team.
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