Saving the Greater Adjutant Stork by Changing Perceptions and Linking to Assamese Traditions in India

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Ethnobiology Letters Pub Date : 2020-12-04 DOI:10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1648
P. D. Barman, D. Sharma, J. Cockrem, Mamani Malakar, Bibekananda Kakati, Tracy A. Melvin
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

The Greater Adjutant Stork (Leptoptilos dubius), locally known as Hargila (the bone swallower) is an endangered bird with an estimated global population of less than 1200. Habitat loss, poisoning, and poaching have caused large declines in populations of this stork in South Asia, with the Brahmaputra valley in Assam in northeastern India now the last stronghold for the species. The stork nests colonially in privately owned trees within thickly populated villages. Tree owners would cut down trees to prevent rotten food and excreta of this carnivorous bird from falling into their backyards. A change in attitudes of the nest-tree owners towards keeping their trees and towards Greater Adjutants has been the key to stork conservation. A conservation project involving community development, education and outreach, interlinking storks with local traditions and cultures, and capacity building of local communities was initiated in 2007. A rural women's conservation group named the Hargila Army was instituted and strong feelings of pride and ownership for the storks by the villagers have been generated. Cash incentives for nest protection were deliberately avoided, with schemes that indirectly contribute to the livelihoods of nest-tree owners and other villagers introduced instead. The success of the conservation program is shown by the increase in the number of nesting colonies in the village area of Dadara, Pachariya, and Singimari in Kamrup District in Assam from 28 nests in 2007–08 to 208 nests in the 2019–20 breeding season, making this the largest breeding colony of Greater Adjutant Storks in the world. Received September 9, 2019 OPEN ACCESS Accepted April 7, 2020 DOI 10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1648 Published December 4, 2020
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通过改变观念和与印度阿萨姆传统的联系来拯救大副官鹳
大副官鹳(Leptoptilos dubius),在当地被称为Hargila(吞骨鸟),是一种濒临灭绝的鸟类,估计全球数量不到1200只。栖息地丧失、中毒和偷猎导致南亚这种鹳的数量大幅下降,印度东北部阿萨姆邦的布拉马普特拉河谷现在是该物种的最后据点。鹳在人口稠密的村庄里的私人拥有的树上筑巢。为了防止腐烂的食物和这种食肉鸟的排泄物掉到他们的后院,树的主人会把树砍倒。巢树的主人对保留他们的树和对大副官的态度的改变是鹳保护的关键。2007年启动了一项保护项目,包括社区发展、教育和推广,将鹳鸟与当地传统和文化联系起来,以及当地社区的能力建设。一个名为“哈吉拉军”的农村妇女保护组织成立了,村民们对这些鹳产生了强烈的自豪感和归属感。保护巢的现金奖励被故意避免,取而代之的是引入间接有助于巢树所有者和其他村民生计的计划。保护计划的成功体现在阿萨姆邦Kamrup地区的Dadara, Pachariya和Singimari村庄地区的筑巢巢穴数量从2007-08年的28个巢穴增加到2019-20年繁殖季节的208个巢穴,使其成为世界上最大的大副官鹳繁殖群。收稿2019年9月9日OPEN ACCESS接收2020年4月7日DOI: 10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1648发布于2020年12月4日
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
审稿时长
16 weeks
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