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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, October 15, 2000 |
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Danger in the wings
THE birds are dying. A drastic decline in the number of vultures,
nature's biggest scavengers and cleansers, and the death of
almost 40 peacocks, the national bird, in Morena district, Madhya
Pradesh, have alarmed the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS),
the World-Wide Fund for Nature (WWFN) - India and
environmentalists in general.
Equally frightening is the steady decline in all bird species,
especially those that feed on insects, like drongos, thrushes,
chats and warblers. These are not exotic, rare species but
feathered friends regaling us for years with their chatter and
enchanting music. These are birds that are intrinsic to the
landscape - adding to the beauty and magic of our green spaces.
Ornithologist Lav Kumar Khachher, who has been holding nature
camps for children at Vashisht, Manali and Pirotan Islands,
Gujarat, for several years, says the decline of these
insectivorous birds is more visible in areas of intensive farming
where pesticides and chemical fertilizers are used extensively.
Grassland birds like floricans and partridges are also on the
decline because the croplands on which they live are being
sprayed with insecticides. The death of insects heralds the end
of the birds that subsist on them.
Most of us who have gardens at home spray insecticides to ensure
a healthy crop of vegetables or flowers without realising the
impact this would have on the pretty birds that flit around
gorging on insects. Mosquito repellants and post-monsoon
fumigation drives kill not just the blood sucking mosquito but a
host of other insects and birds.
Adult birds that do not feed on insects have also been affected,
but to a lesser extent. Fortunately, weaver birds and sparrows
breed in the monsoons when insects are available in plenty to
feed their young. But in Chennai and even in parts of Delhi,
there are fewer sparrows today than before.
Migrant birds too have a problem whether they come from Central
Asia or elsewhere. India is inhospitable to the birds. They stay
here in winter to fatten up for the return flight. But there is
not enough food for them, laments Lav Kumar. The black redstart
and wagtail were once extremely common around homes and fields.
But not anymore. Even in Manali, fewer redstarts and dipper birds
are visible today because the Beas has been polluted with
construction material and fecal matter. Because of the spraying
of apple trees, the chemicals are washed into the river affecting
insect larvae. The result is that our rivers too are becoming
dead, warns Lav Kumar.
The population of larger birds like the saras crane is also
nowhere near what it was 25 years ago, he says. While pesticides
and insecticides are taking their toll, at the other end of the
spectrum, unrestricted grazing and direct human pressure is
reducing habitats. Many birds need trees to nest and when parks
and sanctuaries shrink, the trees disappear. In the Gir National
Park, peacocks can be seen nesting on pylons.
Faulty forestry practices like monoculture plantations and the
introduction of exotics are also damaging bio-diversity. With the
introduction of mechanised farming, hedges - the natural
sanctuaries for several birds - are fast disappearing. Add to
this the mushroom growth of concrete buildings, neatly laid
gardens in place of the wilderness, increased pollution of rivers
and the air over our cities and there can be some idea of the
trauma birds face.
In the Delhi, Agra and Bharatpur belt, there were 20,000 vultures
in the 1980's. Now their number is down to 150, says Sateeshan of
WWFN, Delhi. In the 1990's, because of the large number of
aircraft being hit by birds, on the basis of a BNHS report,
carcass dumps around Delhi airport were moved out and slaughter
houses were sealed to scavengers with wire fencing.
The birds then moved out to other areas in search of food.
According to Sateeshan, when they moved out they began feeding on
poison-baited carcasses. Around the Corbett National Park in
Uttar Pradesh and other protected areas, farmers have been
retaliating against tigers and leopards that kill cattle. They
poison cattle carcasses. Vultures as scavengers come to clean up
the remains and get poisoned. In the Annamalais area too, a
scientist, Kannan, has recorded that vultures are getting wiped
out because of animal baits. In North India, there is rivalry
between villagers for hides. Cattle poisoning is quite common as
a result.
Poisoning of wildlife and vultures is happening all over the
world, says Sateeshan. He advocates the creation of special food
reserves for vultures so that their population increases. The
vultures can be relocated once their numbers increase.
While the poisoning of vultures needs urgent attention,
disappearance of large tree species like the tamarind, pilkan and
the banyan, which these large birds like to nest in, also
contributes to the decline in their numbers.
The large number of peacocks that died in Morena ate bajra that
had high levels of mercury salts. It had affected their kidneys,
says S. C. Sharma, Additional Inspector-General for Wildlife in
the Environment and Forest Ministry. Ashok Kumar of the Wildlife
Protection Society of India says a large number of new seeds are
coming into the market that are treated with chemicals and coated
with fertilizers to ensure germination. They are supposed to be
sown at least an inch below the ground. For a week after sowing,
peacocks and other birds have to be prevented from digging up the
earth and getting at the seed. This is not always possible.
Geeta Seshmani of Friendicos, a non-government organisation that
cares for stray/abandoned animals and cattle in Delhi, says
"seven sick peacocks were brought to them for treatment early
this year. All died within 24 hours". In the last year and a
half, Friendicos has also handled some 300 raptors, brought in a
distraught, disoriented state. The spraying of gardens and
scattering of chemically treated bajra is increasing sickness and
paralysis in birds, says Seshmani.
Spraying areas outside public garbage bins harms cows, dogs and
pigs that rummage through them for food. The Environment Ministry
is caught in a classic catch-22 situation. It can only request
the Agriculture Ministry to stop spraying of chemical pesticides
and fertilizers within a five kilometre radius of protected
areas, says Sharma. In other areas, he advocates testing for
toxicity of treated bajra and seeds before release. The poisoning
of wildlife will be discussed at the meeting to draft the
national wildlife policy.
It will take a long time for policies to change. We cannot afford
to lose any more time. In the words of Lav Kumar remember that "a
bird friendly habitat is a human friendly habitat". A garden with
climbers, bushes and wild growth can be your contribution to give
a fresh lease of life to our feathered friends.
USHA RAI
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