Thu Mar 29 00:44:20 200717

Fetching...
 
YOU ARE HERE: Homepage > Newsdesk > Article
Nepal "restaurant" for vultures serves health food
10 Feb 2007 07:44:08 GMT
Source: Reuters

KATHMANDU, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Conservationists in Nepal have opened a special "restaurant" to offer safe food to vultures, whose existence is being threatened from eating carcasses of cattle treated with drugs.

Scientists says South Asia's vultures are on the brink of extinction largely due to farmers dosing their cattle with diclofenac, a drug used to treat inflammation, poisoning the scavenging birds one step up the food chain.

Numbers of Oriental white-backed, long-billed and slender-billed vultures in the region have plummeted.

The vulture population in Nepal is estimated to have fallen to a mere 500 nesting pairs from at least 50,000 pairs in 1990, according to a local conservation group, Bird Conservation Nepal.

But now a special feeding centre set up by the conservation group at Kawasoti, about 100 km (60 miles) southwest of the capital, Kathmandu, is trying to ensure vultures get a chance to eat chemical-free cattle carcasses.

"Our effort is to let at least some vultures eat safe food," the group's chief, Hem Sagar Baral, told Reuters on Saturday.

Kawasoti, a roadside town, has a large concentration of vultures, prompting Baral's group to set up the feeding centre there in April last.

At the centre, which Baral describes as a "restaurant", sick and dying cows which have never been treated with diclofenac are brought in, and when they die they are left for the vultures.

The use of diclofenac is prohibited in Nepal and neighbouring India, but the ban is widely ignored.

Baral said his group planned to open more such safe feeding facilities for vultures in the country.
AlertNet news is provided by

Delicio.us  |   Digg  |   NewsVine  |   Reddit                                                                                  Permalink
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-03-28T080253Z_01_MUM117_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA-MAOISTS-TRIBALS_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/MUM117.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-03-28T080233Z_01_MUM114_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA-MAOISTS-TRIBALS_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/MUM114.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-03-28T080224Z_01_MUM115_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA-MAOISTS-TRIBALS_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/MUM115.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-03-28T080206Z_01_MUM113_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA-MAOISTS-TRIBALS_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/MUM113.htm
Thumb for /thefacts/imagerepository/RTRPICT/2007-03-28T080144Z_01_MUM116_RTRIDSP_2_INDIA-MAOISTS-TRIBALS_mainimage.jpg|/thenews/pictures/MUM116.htm

Security personnel train at a counter-terrorism and jungle warfare school in Kanker village, about 140 km (87 miles) south of the central Indian city of Raipur March 19, 2007. Thousands of tribal people in this central state of Chhattisgarh have seen ancestral lands turned into a war zone of landmines, ambushes and refugee camps as a 40-year-old Maoist insurgency in India gathers momentum. The region is now a stronghold of up to 4,000 well-armed Maoists, police say, who freely roam the forests of southern Chhattisgarh in what locals call the "red zone". Picture taken March 19, 2007. To match feature INDIA-MAOISTS/TRIBALS