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First captive-bred Asian vulture chicks die
22 Feb 2007 08:50:58 GMT
Source: Reuters

NEW DELHI, Feb 22 (Reuters) - Two rare vultures said to be the first of their species bred in captivity have died after only a few weeks, a scientist said on Thursday, in a blow for conservationists trying to save the endangered South Asian birds from extinction.

The Oriental white-backed vulture chicks had been warmly greeted when they hatched in January at a breeding centre in Pinjore in the north Indian state of Haryana.

Both chicks died later in January, Vibhu Prakash, the principal scientist of the Bombay Natural History Society's vulture breeding programme, told Reuters on Thursday.

Prakash blamed the parents.

"They were first-time parents and they just didn't know what to do with their chicks," he said.

"That happens very often even in the wild."

The society is trying to save South Asia's Oriental white-backed, long-billed and slender-billed vultures from extinction.

The population of these birds has dropped by more than 97 percent in the last 15 years, according to Britain's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.

Scientists say the decline is largely due to farmers dosing their cattle with the anti-inflammatory drug diclofenac, poisoning the birds one step up the food chain.

Prakash said the society was taking the bad news in its stride.

"This is just a part of what happens in nature" he said. "We were not expecting breeding to happen so soon anyway."

He said dozens of vultures at the centre would reach parenting age in the next two or three years, when breeding would begin in earnest.
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Atapi Mondol, whose husband was devoured by a tiger, stands in front of her house in Saatjelia island, about 130 km (81 miles) southwest from the eastern Indian city of Kolkata February 21, 2007. In the last five years, at least 50 people have been mauled to death by the 250 to 270 Royal Bengal tigers which stalk India's half of the Sunderbans - stretching along the coast of West Bengal state and across the border into Bangladesh. Picture taken February 21, 2007.