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Durrell flying high when it comes to saving our feathered friends

Durrell flying high when it comes to saving our feathered friends

Monday 07 September 2015

Durrell flying high when it comes to saving our feathered friends

Monday 07 September 2015


Durrell is helping protect half of the species on a new top ten list of birds that are benefiting from work done by zoos and aquariums.

The Trust's conservationists are working with five of the species on the list compiled by The British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums (BIAZA).

They are helping to protect the Northern bald ibis, Madagascar pochard, Edwards’s pheasant, Blue-crowned laughing thrush and the Bali starling.

Nine years ago there were only 20 Madagascar pochards left in the wild. Durrell instigated a captive breeding programme in partnership with the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust and there are now around 100 birds in captivity and plans are in place to re-introduce them as early as next year. 

It has also been instrumental in helping to create a safety-net population of the critically endangered Bali starling. The wildlife park has been home to the species since the early 1970's and has twice sent birds back to Indonesia to join a captive breeding programme. 

Head of Durrell's Bird Department David Jeggo said: "Zoos can do so much to help birds, as the BIAZA report demonstrates. It's great to see Durrell's contribution to this - we hold half of the species listed in the report in our collection, all of which are critically endangered. This is a big achievement, especially for such a small organisation."

BIAZA’s CEO Dr Kirsten Pullen said: “This year’s Top Ten report is the fourth in a series which highlights the contribution of good zoos and aquariums to the conservation of the natural world. This time, the focus is on birds.

“Zoos and aquariums are an active part of the global conservation community. They can marry up active field conservation with the ‘Ark Concept’ of captive breeding programmes.

“The birds in our latest Top Ten report are all species that are reliant on captive breeding to complement field initiatives.”

Madagascar_pochard.jpg

 

BIAZA’s top ten bird species benefitting from zoos and aquariums are:

African penguin: Numbers are plummeting in the wild due to oil spills, overfishing, shifts in food availability and human disturbance.

Bali starling: These are seen as very desirable cage birds, and illegal trapping has brought them to virtual extinction in the wild.

Blue-crowned laughing thrush: The zoo population of this Chinese bird equates to 50% of the total global population.

Ecuadorian Amazon parrot: With fewer than 600 individuals left, its survival relies on the protection of remaining wild populations and their habitats.

Edwards’s pheasant: There is a small captive population, but it has never been seen or studied by a scientist in the wild.

Madagascar pochard: Just 20-25 Madagascar pochard now survive in the wild.

Northern bald ibis: Pesticide poisoning has had a devastating effect on their numbers. The BIAZA community is working together to ensure a genetically diverse bloodline within the captive population.

Oriental white-backed Vulture: Species restoration has been made possible by zoo-based expertise and funding.

Socorro dove: A classic island species, numbers have been devastated by man-introduced pests like rats, cats and goats. Captive breeding has saved it from total extinction.

Visayan tarictic hornbill: Two BIAZA zoos are actively supporting in-situ work to save and restore the wild habitat of this species.

 

 

 

 

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