Adjutant loses territory
- June 9, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Adjutant loses territory
Sub: Environment
Sec: Species in news
Greater adjutant stork (Leptoptilos dubius):
- Once found widely across southern Asia and mainland southeast Asia, the greater adjutant is now restricted to a much smaller range with only three breeding populations; two in India, with the largest colony in Assam and a smaller one around Bhagalpur; and another breeding population in Cambodia.
- Habitat in Assam: Brahmaputra valley, Assam, primarily in the districts of Guwahati, Morigaon, and Nagaon.
- Breeding and Feeding:
- Breeding season: October to February.
- Dependence on wetlands for foraging and tall trees for roosting and nesting.
- Diet: Principally carnivorous, feeding on fish, frogs, snakes, other reptiles, eels, birds, offal and carrion. It shares the habit of scavenging with vultures.
- These storks are not migratory and rely entirely on the threatened wetlands of Assam.
- Conservation Status: Listed as endangered on the Red List of Threatened Species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
- Historical Population: Guwahati once had the largest concentration of these storks in India.
Habitat Challenges:
- Rapid urbanization has led to the loss of wetlands, a critical habitat for these storks.
- Many are now confined to a garbage dumping site near the Deepor Beel Wildlife Sanctuary, a Ramsar site.
- Habitat Destruction:
- Wetlands and roosting trees are being destroyed by encroachment, overfishing, and drainage projects.
- Many roosting trees are on private land and are being cut down.
- Human Interaction:
- Local communities often drive the birds away due to the strong odour of their droppings and the presence of rotting meat brought to feed their hatchlings.
Source: TH