15 Indian bird species among globally endangered
A study says Bengal Florican, Lesser Florican, Great Indian Bustard, Sociable Lapwing and Jerdon’s Courser are birds that are under threat due to destruction of their habitat of grasslands and scrub forests
Fifteen Indian bird species are part of a list of
avians which are evolutionarily distinct and globally endangered. The
Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and Yale University has come out with
a study of 100 Evolutionarily Distinct and Globally Endangered (EDGE)
species worldwide.
The study says Bengal Florican,
Lesser Florican, Great Indian Bustard, Sociable Lapwing and Jerdon’s
Courser are birds that are under threat due to the destruction of their
habitat of grasslands and scrub forests. The survival of Spoon-billed
Sandpiper, Siberian Crane and White-bellied Heron greatly depend on the
existence of their wetland habitat.
Forest Owlet’s
survival is impossible if its habitat of deciduous forests in central
India is destroyed, the study said. Officials of the Bombay Natural
History Society (BNHS), which works on the conservation of 12 of these
threatened birds, said these species were threatened by human factors
such as uncontrolled urbanisation, unsustainable industrialisation and
rampant use of chemicals in agriculture.
“Comprehensive conservation action based on in-depth field research is
required to save these species from going extinct. Today these habitats
are facing some of the most severe human pressure which endangers the
survival of the avian population found there,” BNHS director Asad
Rahmani said.
Habitats such as grasslands and
wetlands and the species inhabiting them have long been neglected in the
conservation process in India, he added. Bittu Sahgal, editor,
Sanctuary Asia, said birds such as the Bengal Florican, Great Indian
Bustard, and Jerdon’s Courser are as vital to the health of grasslands
as the tiger is to the forests in which it is found.
“India has displayed little regard for its grasslands these past
decades and it is about time the nation stopped treating these
life-saving ecosystems as wastelands”, Mr. Sahgal, also an environmental
activist said.
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