Critically endangered Sociable lapwing flock discovered in Turkey07/07/2007 00:00:00Sociable lapwing
It is thought that this is a different flock to the one discovered in February 2007 in Syria. (perhaps they were never quite as rare as thought?) The RSPB’s Dr Rob Sheldon, who tagged the bird in Kazakhstan, said: ‘This discovery is something we didn’t dare dream of. The sociable lapwing is one of the rarest birds on earth and suddenly it’s been found in these large numbers. ‘It shows just how important both Kazakhstan and Turkey have become for the survival of this species. The next step is to protect the bird, both on its breeding grounds and at all the key sites on its migration route.’ Only 200 pairs of sociable lapwing were thought to remain in 2003 when the bird was classified as critically endangered, the highest level of threat there is. Nests at breeding sites were being trampled where land was still farmed and elsewhere, vegetation was too dense for young chicks to survive. Breeding has improved more recently, however, and conservationists feared that hunting and habitat change on migration routes were reducing the bird’s numbers. Satellite tracking Then on 12 October researchers from the Turkish conservation group Doga Dernegi found 1,800 sociable lapwings in Ceylanpınar and the next day, a total of 3,200 of the birds. They were following the co-ordinates provided by satellites for the bird that had flown from Kazakhstan. Ozge Balkız, a scientist at Doga Dernegi, said: ‘This is a major breakthrough in efforts to help these birds and will be enormously significant in planning their protection. They could still move on to Iraq or East Africa but if they stay in Turkey, it will be much easier to make them safe. We can keep an eye on them here, raise awareness amongst local people and work with the Turkish government to protect the areas they are using.’ The tagging project is partly paid for by the UK government’s Darwin Initiative and conservationists from Britain and Kazakhstan hope to win new funds to tag more birds next summer. The long-term hope is that other migrating flocks will be found and that researchers can relax their efforts to help the bird. Maxim Koshkin of the Association for the Conservation of Biodiversity in Kazakhstan, said: ‘Understanding the migration from breeding sites in Kazakhstan is essential for the future protection of this species, so the news of such a large flock is a great cause for celebration.’ Guven Eken, Executive Director of Doga Dernegi, said: ‘By tracking a single bird from its Kazakh breeding grounds, we have found the location of most of the world population of these birds in Turkey. Sociable lapwings are finally living up to their name.’
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