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Syria - Northern Bald Ibis updates (1 Viewer)

deborah4

Well-known member
The successful tagging of the two of the remaining seven breeding Northern Bald Ibis in Syria is excellent news - is has been touched on in other threads along with news of the European NBI but I thought it would be good to have an 'update' thread specifically for news of the Syrian group.

Some background first:

http://www.birdlife.org/news/pr/2002/07/557.html

and the successful tagging:

http://www.birdlife.org

http://www.rspb.org.uk/international/conservation/taggingsuccess.asp


If you have any news/views please share!
 
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Capercaillie71 said:
There haven't been any updates on the satellite map for the last few days - hope they are alright. Last reports from Yemen on 27 July:

http://www.rspb.org.uk/tracking/northern_bald_ibis.asp

I've just tried googling Yemen to get an idea of environmental situation - if this is the final resting ground for the winter (not saying it is by a long shot) - I guess issues such as waste management (of which there seems to be major difficulties) and water pollution from toxic waste, as well as increased tourist development along coastal areas, could all be extremely problematic - thank G*d they were'nt heading for the Lebanon!

http://www.al-bab.com/arab/news/yemen.htmhttp://www.al-bab.com/arab/news/yemen.htm
 
I just checked and latest info is from 27 July. Two birds in Yemen and one in Saudi Arabia. I wonder if data will be updated. I hope the system didn't break down.

Yemen was wintering area of Bald Ibis. But also Eritrea and Ethiopia. So they could move yet. Who knows?
 
Have emailed the YSPW (Yemen Society for Protection of Wildlife) to see if there is any news (doubt whether they will release anything but worth a try)
 
Capercaillie71 said:
Exciting stuff - All three birds are now at the same location in central Ethiopia.

Gets easier to understand a) why we didn't know where they wintered and b) why (at least in part) they've declined virtually to extinction in recent centuries (the area is subject to severe environmental degradation).
 
There doesn't seem to be any news coming out of Ethiopia at all on how the 3 tagged birds are faring and web site hasn't been updated for about a month now. Bit disappointing really. Wandered if anyone else has any more info?
 
Northern bald ibis' winter home found

Winter home find cheers twitchers (sic)

In a winter home

Bird charities are ecstatic after identifying the winter home of the northern bald ibis, a critically endangered species.

Three birds have now been followed by satellite tags from their summer grounds in Syria to Ethiopia.

Britain's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) describes the find as a "major breakthrough".

It says the ibis is the rarest bird in the Middle East; exact numbers are unknown but could be under 1,000.

The internationally-recognised Red List of Threatened Species categorises the northern bald ibis (Geronticus eremita) as critically endangered because of habitat loss, farming, human encroachment and pollution.

Knowing where these birds go and how they get there is a major breakthrough

Chris Bowden
There are thought to be only two surviving summer populations, one in Syria and one in Morocco. Its range used to extend into Europe.

"Knowing where these birds go and how they get there is a major breakthrough," said Chris Bowden, a bald ibis specialist with RSPB.

"This has answered a big question mark that remained for this species, and one that we feared we might never resolve."

Deity in danger

Scientists followed the birds by tagging them with satellite transmitters.

Images of Thoth, the "ibis god", are found on tombs of some Pharaohs
Three tagged ibis, nicknamed Sultan, Salam and Zenobia, turned up in Ethiopia, as did one untagged member of the same group.

Getting there entailed a journey of 3,100km (1,900 miles).

The location surprised researchers who had been looking for them further north.

"As we searched, we were not getting any signals from the transmitters, so finding the birds in such a remote area was a wonderful surprise," said Mengistu Wondafrash from the Ethiopian Wildlife and Natural History Society.

"We will be doing all we can to implement conservation measures to help increase the numbers of this rare but special bird."

The ibis is familiar to Egyptologists from images of Thoth, the "ibis god", found on tombs of some Pharaohs.
 
Sounds great! I hope ibis will be protected in Ethiopia. I hope additional birds will be discovered or the problem is somewhere along migration route in Arabian countries.

...I can also foresee birding trips making a detour from the usual Ethiopian highlands. ;)
 
"about 50 miles (80 km) from the country's capital, Addis Ababa"

... that's like 'Milton Keynes'... practically in the suburbs!
 
Interesting Capercaille - guess until more of the Syrian birds are tagged it will be difficult to know whether these new sightings are from the Syrian breeding population or there's another/others not yet located
 
Northern Bald Ibises are neet some zoos here in the sates have them

Northern Bald Ibises are neet some zoos here in the sates have them
 
Some new (and possibly encouraging) developments in the bald ibis migration story are reported here:

http://www.rspb.org.uk/news/details.asp?id=tcm:9-180033

This is truly great news. Thanks for keeping us updated.

dinoman: Fortunately, this species is pretty common now in zoos. But it's a different, and much more difficult, story in the wild. And adult birds from captivity can't be used for releases as they "get lost". They need a site imprinting during their first flights. Various reintroduction programs have been going on for several years. But as far as I know, without any true success so far.
 
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