Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre, Pinjore

Jatayu Conservation and Breeding Centre
जटायु संरक्षण एवं प्रजनन केँद्र
Critically Endangered Bird Breeding Centre
Indian vulture in flight
Jatayu Conservation and Breeding Centre
Location in Haryana, India
Jatayu Conservation and Breeding Centre
Jatayu Conservation and Breeding Centre (India)
Coordinates: 30°46′7″N 76°57′19″E / 30.76861°N 76.95528°E / 30.76861; 76.95528Coordinates: 30°46′7″N 76°57′19″E / 30.76861°N 76.95528°E / 30.76861; 76.95528
Country  India
State Haryana
District Panchkula
Founded by Former Chief Minister of Harayana Om Prakash Chautala
Named for Jatayu
Government
  Type Government of Haryana
  Body Forests Department, Haryana
Time zone UTC+5:30 (IST)
Website haryanaforest.gov.in

The Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre, Pinjore (JCBC), (Hindi: जटायु संरक्षण एवं प्रजनन केँद्र) is world's largest[1] facility within Bir Shikargah Wildlife Sanctuary for the breeding and conservation of Indian vultures (गिध) in the State of Haryana, India, in Panchkula district in the town of Pinjore.[2][3] It is run by the Forests Department, Haryana and Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) with the help of British charity Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB).[4] It is located within the Bir Shikargah Wildlife Sanctuary 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) away from Pinjore on Pinjor-Mallah Road,[2] 30 kilometres (19 mi) from Chandigarh, 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Panchkula, 250 kilometres (160 mi) from New Delhi, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) from Kalka and 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Morni Hill station.

History

Asia's first vulture breeding facility JCBC was established in 2001, named after the mythical vulture Jatayu from the Hindu epic Ramayana,[5] is a joint project of the Forests Department, Haryana and the Bombay Natural History Society.[6] It covers 5 acres (2.0 ha), and its focus is the conservation, study, and breeding of critically endangered and threatened species of vultures on the IUCN Red List.[1]

Fossil records of earlier types of vultures have been found going as far back as 20 million years ago, from which the Gyps species evolved representing majority of the vultures in the Indian subcontinent,[7][8][9] which live in the nests or ledges on the high cliff faces in social groups of typically 20 to 30 and even up to 100 vultures, with nests made from the wool, skin, dung and refuse.[10] Vultures are scavengers with high tolerance for the deadly pathogen found in their primary meal of rotting bodies of dead animals.[11]

Out of 40 million vultures population of India in 1993,[12] 99.9% of Slender-billed vultures and 97% White-backed vulture have disappeared from their primary habitat by 2007, due to the use of anti-inflammation drug diclofenac used to treat the cattle,[13][12] which remains in the dead bodies of the cattle when administered few days prior to the death for treatment of illness, drug then enters vultures stomach as they consume these dead animals, poisoning the vultures to death.[12] Reduction of vultures led to extra dead body, resulting in sustainable addition of 7 million more feral dogs who inflicted 40 million more dog bites between 1993 to 2016, causing US$34 billion loss to the economy of India.[12]

The ban on the use of diclofenac in 2007-2008, combined with the success of vulture breeding of 3 critically endangered species at JCBC, led the to formation of the Saving Asia's Vultures from Extinction (SAVE) in 2011 as a consortium of 14 partner organizations and 14 Indian government agencies,[14] with a goal of restoring at least 40% (16 million) of the vanished 40 million three critically endangered vulture species (white backed, long billed and slender billed) population of South Asia,[13] by releasing 600 vultures across 3000,000 square km,[14] a goal to be attained by setting up of total 8 vulture breeding centres (JCBC and 7 new) across India with the resident vulture population of at least 25 vultures each of three critically endangered species.[15]

In 2014, plan for the establishment of following 7 new vulture breeding centres, to replicate the successful model of JCBC, was announced by the government of India, by relocating some vultures from JCBC and all vultures from 19 other zoos in India:[15]

  1. Rani Vulture Breeding Centre inside Brahmaputra Valley semi-evergreen forests at Rani in Kamprup district of Assam
  2. Rajabhatkhawa Vulture Breeding Centre at Buxa National Park, West Bengal
  3. Hydrabad Vulture Breeding Center at Nehru Zoological Park, Hydrabad
  4. Kerwa Vulture Breeding Center at Van Vihar National Park, Bhopal.[16]
  5. Junagadh Vulture Breeding Center at Sakkarbaug Zoological Garden, Junagadh
  6. Ranchi Vulture Breeding Center at Crocodile Breeding Centre, Muta, Ranchi
  7. Bhubaneswar Vulture Breeding Center at Nandankanan Zoological Park, Bhubaneswar

Vulture conservation at JCBC

JCBC Research on Vultures and Diclofenac

JCBC undertakes the research on vultures, their habitat, the causes of their declining numbers, and uses this for the vulture advocacy. The Centre's research confirmed the discovery that the use of anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac in cattle was a critical factor in the decline of vulture populations.[5] The Government of India banned the veterinary use of the drug in 2007-2008 as a result of research done at the Centre, since then the use of diclofenac has gone down significantly, but it still remains a declining threat.[5]

Species at JCBC

JCBC houses the following four species, three critically endangered (CR) species and one threatened species for breeding and conservation at the centre:[5][13]

  • Critically Endangered species
    • Indian vulture, scientific name: Gyps indicus, formerly knows as the long-billed vulture.
    • Slender-billed vultures, scientific name: Gyps tenuirostris, formerly called long billed vultures, 97% have been wiped out by the diclofenac.[13]
    • White-rumped vulture, scientific name: Gyps bengalensis, formerly knows as the Oriental White-Backed vulture, 99.9% have been wiped out by the diclofenac.[13]
  • Threatened species

Conservation and Breeding Activities

JCBC is world's largest facility in terms of numbers of vultures,[1] hosting ever increasing 250 vultures in 2017,[5] growing annually at the rate of more than 17% per year.[5][1]

In 2007, the Aviculture (breeding) at JCBC was started in the on-site vulture hatchery.[5] In 2016, release in the wild program commenced for the first time in Asia.[1] In 2017, Asia's first satellite tracking of the released vultures started at JCBC from 2017.[5]

Starting from 2007, JCBC has successfully accelerated the breeding count by doubling of the number of these otherwise "slow to breed" vulture species, by mastering the artificial incubation technique.[5] As a result of the successful breeding program, the number of vultures at JCBC rose by 17% within a year, from 214 vultures in year 2016[1] to 250 vultures in year 2017.[5] JCBC has successfully released the captures and rehabilitated as well as captivity bred vultures back in to the wild life after the proper acclimatization and preparation.[5][1] There is a 10 years plan to release 100 vultures from 2016 to 2026.[5]

In 2016, out of 214 vultures at JCBC, 76 were Indian vultures, 29 were Slender-billed vultures, 107 were White-rumped vultures and two were Himalayan vultures (these two were released in that year).[1] In 2016, Asia's first[17] ever release of vultures program commenced on the World Environment Day, with the release of two Himalayan Griffons, that were released with the wing tags[16] (brightly coloured plastic tags for the field observation through binoculars) and ring tags[17] (brightly coloured elastic tags with conspicuous letters and numbers markings used by the field biologists to identify individual birds without recapture) but without the satellite-based tracking device.[5] These two vultures were brought in 2005 to lay eggs for breeding, were eventually released in the wild in 2016, but could not be tracked due to the lack of satellite tracker.[5] In 2016, 15 vultures, 10 Slender-billed and 5 White-rumped. were sent from JCBC to Kerwa Vulture Breeding Center located inside the Van Vihar National Park at Bhopal.[16]

In 2017, out of 250 vultures, 90 were caught for the breeding and 160 have been bred in the captivity in the natural setting of Bir Shikargah Wildlife Sanctuary, which makes it easy to rehabilitate the vultures in a phased manner in the wild-like natural conditions for the eventual release in wild.[5] Since 2017, JCBC started to use the Satellite tracking system by purchasing the tracking units from British catalogue retailer Argos at the cost of INR 5 lakh each, after obtaining the allocation of radio frequency and security clearance from the Department of Telecommunications of the Indian Ministry of Communications.[5] Vultures are acclimatized with the dummy tags prior to the release.[5] Each satellite tracking unit, tagged under the wings with the light weight sturdy teflon string, relays vulture's latitude and longitude location four times a day during the 3 years life span of the tracking unit.[5] Up on release, if the tracking location remains static for a day, it is indicative of some problem, which is then investigated by the ground team of humans to physically locate and investigate the vulture.[5] In 2017, eight vultures were released with the satellite trackers for the first time, out of which were White-rumped vulture and two other vultures brought from the wild at the beginning of the breeding program in 2007 for the purpose of breeding.[5]

References

See also

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Environment Day: 2 Himalayan Griffon vultures released from breeding centre, Hindustan Times, 5 June 2016
  2. 1 2 "Haryana Forest Department". Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 11 May 2014.
  3. Forests Department, Haryana
  4. Flight of Highly Endangered Vultures Grounded by Red Tape; TheQuint.com; Published: 8-May-2017
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Pinjore’s vultures on a wing and a prayer for survival, Vivek Gupta, Hindustan Times, 17 June 2017
  6. "Jatayu Conservation Breeding Centre, Pinjore". Forests Department, Haryana. 19 May 2014. Archived from the original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  7. [Rich, Pat V. ‘The Fossil Record of the Vultures: A World Perspective.’ Vulture Biology and Management. Ed. Sanford R. Wilbur and Andrew L. Jackson. Berkeley: U of California P, 1983. 3-25.]
  8. [Houston, David C., and J.E. Cooper. ‘The Digestive Tract of the Whiteback Griffon Vulture and Its Role in Disease Transmission among Wild Ungulates.’ Journal of Wildlife Diseases 11 (1975): 306-13.]
  9. [Houston, David C. ‘The Adaptive Radiation of the Griffon Vultures.’ Vulture Biology and Management. Ed. Sanford R. Wilbur and Andrew L. Jackson. Berkeley: U of California P, 1983. 135-52.]
  10. [Ferguson-Lees, James, and David A. Christie. Raptors of the World. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2001.]
  11. [Amadon, Dean. ‘Foreword.’ Vulture Biology and Management. Ed. Sanford R. Wilbur and Jerome A. Jackson. Berkeley: U of California P, 1983. ix-xi.]
  12. 1 2 3 4 The Value of Vultures: What’s a vulture worth? A lot more than you might think. Tony Juniper, Ensia by Institute on the Environment. 4 June 2014
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 Saving Asia's Vultures from brink, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
  14. 1 2 SAVE partners, www.save-vultures.org
  15. 1 2 Vultures to be bred at 8 more centres, 3 March 2014
  16. 1 2 3 15 new vulture pairs brought to Bhopal conservation centre from Pinjore, Aditi Gyanesh, The Times of India, 6 Oct 2016
  17. 1 2 Asia's first vulture re-introduction programme launched in Haryana, Manjeet Sehgal, India Today, 3 June 2016
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