What's New :
Target PT - Prelims Classes 2025. Visit Here

Himalayan vulture bred in captivity

Published: 10th Aug, 2023

Context

Researchers have recorded the first instance of captive breeding of the Himalayan vulture in India at the Assam State Zoo, Guwahati.

About

About Himalayan Vulture (Gyps himalayensis):

  • The Himalayan vulture is a common winter migrant to the Indian plains, and a resident of the high Himalayas.
  • IUCN Status: Near Threatened
  • They are one of the two largest Old World vultures and true raptors.
  • The Himalayan vulture mostly lives the Himalayas on the Tibetan plateau (India, Nepal and Bhutan, central China and Mongolia) and is also found in the Central Asian mountains (from Kazakhstan and Afghanistan in the west to western China and Mongolia in the east).

Global Vulture Status and Conservation:

  • Vulture numbers saw a decline as much as 90% in some species in India since the 1990s in one of the most drastic declines in bird populations in the world.
  • Between the 1990s and 2007, numbers of three presently critically-endangered species, the Oriental white-backed, long-billed and slender-billed vultures decreased massively with 99% of the species having been wiped out.
  • The number of red-headed vultures, also critically-endangered now, declined by 91% while the Egyptian vultures by 80%.

Vultures in India:

India shelters about nine species of vultures, but most of them face the danger of extinction.

Why vultures matter?

  • Nature’s cleanup:Vultures feeding on dead animals help areas getting rid of carcasses.
  • Healthy environment:Vultures also play a valuable role in keeping wildlife diseases in check.
  • Keystone species:Contribution in Detritus food chain and acts as a keystone species.

Important Terms

  • Keystone species:A keystone species is an organism that helps define an entire ecosystem. Without its keystone species, the ecosystem would be dramatically different or cease to exist altogether. Keystone species have low functional redundancy.
  • Detritus Food chain: It is the type of food chain that starts with dead organic materials. The dead organic substances are decomposed by microorganisms.
  • The organisms that feed on dead organic matter or detritus are known as detritivores or decomposers.

Threats to Vulture population:

  • Diclofenac Contamination: Vultures feed on carcasses of dead farm animals and get exposed to the non-steroid anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), diclofenac which causes kidney failure and death.
    • 99% of the mortality of Oriental.
    • White-backed, slender-billed and long-billed vultures are due to diclofenac.
  • Habitat Loss: Vultures populations are declining due to habitat loss, food unavailability, and electrocution.
    • Degradation of nesting sites due to cutting down of trees for agriculture, urbanization, and firewood, fire and grazing is a threat to vultures.
  • Low Food Availability: Dead animals are the primary source of food for vultures, but the practice of throwing carcasses in the open has almost vanished, leading to a decrease in available food.
  • Bioaccumulation: means an increase in the concentration of a chemical in a biological organism over time, compared to the chemical's concentration in the environment.

Conservation efforts:

  • Four Vulture Conservation Breeding Centre has been established by Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) at Pinjore in Haryana, Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh, Rani in Assam, and Rajabhatkhawa in West Bengal are involved in conservation breeding of the
    • White-rumped vulture (Gyps bengalensis)
    • Slender-billed vulture(Gyps tenuirostris)
    • Indian vulture (Gyps indicus)
  • Vulture Conservation 2020-2025:  A Vulture Care Centre (VCC) was set up at Pinjore, Haryana in 2001 to study the cause of deaths of vultures in India.
  • TheJatayu Conservation Breeding Centre in Pinjore is the world’s largest facility within the state’s BirShikargah Wildlife Sanctuary for the breeding and conservation of Indian vulture species.
  • SAVE (Saving Asia’s Vultures from Extinction):The consortium of like-minded, regional and international organizations, created to oversee and coordinate conservation, campaigning and fundraising activities to help the plight of south Asia’s vultures.
  • Ramadevarabetta Vulture Sanctuary: The vulture sanctuary was officially set up in 2012, but the long-billed, Egyptian and white-backed vultures have been roosting in the hills of Ramanagara for several decades. These are the three species found in Ramanagara out of the nine found in India.

Verifying, please be patient.

Enquire Now