Conservation success for world’s largest flying bird

Source: scenta
great bustard
Leave a comment and win

Great Bustards released at a secret Wiltshire location in the UK have laid their first eggs.

Dr Tamas Szekely from the University of Bath says that the announcement from the Great Bustard Group comes a year earlier than predicted, and shows that the project is making good progress.
 
The Great Bustard is the world’s largest flying bird and, although it was hunted as a trophy until it became extinct in the UK in the 1830s, it still lives in stable populations in Eastern Europe.
 
Since 2004, the Great Bustard Group has released more than 60 Great Bustard chicks, all hatched from eggs salvaged from nests destroyed by cultivation.
 
Due to fears of egg thieves and disturbance from bird watchers, the announcement that eggs had been laid in the UK was delayed.
 
The eggs were incubated for a time by the female but were then abandoned. After examination they were found to be infertile.

Great Bustard breeding process

"Males need to be four to five years old before they can breed, so the fact that the eggs were infertile was not a big surprise," said Dr Szekely, who is the project’s scientific adviser.
 
"What is encouraging is that the eggs were laid in the first place; unhappy birds do not produce eggs.
 
"The males have a spectacular courtship display which was seen in this country for the first time in over 175 years this year.
 
"This is a very exciting time for the project, and marks an important step towards a breeding population of Great Bustards in the UK," he added.
 
Male Great Bustards stand around 90-105cm (about 3ft) tall and can weigh up to 20 kilos (3st). Females tend to be much smaller.
 
"Great Bustards are a magnificent species and birdwatchers have it as one of their top species to see," said Dr Szekely, from the university's Department of Biology & Biochemistry.
 
"They are shy and easily disturbed, so it is encouraging to see these developments.
 
"The next step is to see the first Great Bustard chicks hatch, and we very much hope that will happen within the next two years," he concluded.

 

You’ve read it. Now review it.

Source: scenta
Date Published: July 24, 2007
 
Useful? Recommend It.

If you found this item fun or informative, please let others know. Simply send to a friend or recommend it to even more people - on any of the following sites:

Latest Science News | reddit | digg.com | del.icio.us | rollyo | stumbleupon

More on breeding programmes...

China to lift ban on sale of tiger bones
Tiger bones will go back on sale because market forces are too strong to resist, a senior China conservation official was reported as saying in the domestic media today, raising fears of a lifting of the trade ban on one of the world's most endangered species.

Madagascar chameleon spends most of its life as egg
A bizarre species of chameleon that spends most of its short life as an egg has been discovered by conservationists in Madagascar.

One in four mammals under threat
Thousands of species in danger of extinction in the wild may survive only in captivity. The annual 'Red List' of extinct and endangered species to be published on Wednesday by the World Conservation Union is expected to show another increase in the numbers under threat of being wiped out by habitat loss, hunting, alien predators and climate change.

All the industrial manufacturers Industrial Catalogues and Technical Brochures