State of Birds: Most species dip, India Peafowl among those flourishing
- August 26, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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State of Birds: Most species dip, India Peafowl among those flourishing
Subject: Environment
Section: Species in news
Context:
- There is a general decline in numbers in most bird species in the country – some recording current decline and others projected to decline in the long term, according to a report based on data from about 30,000 birdwatchers.
About the Report:
- Report title: The State of India’s Birds 2023
- Released after three years.
- The report is an assessment of distribution range, trends in abundance and conservation status of 942 of India’s 1,200 bird species.
- The survey has been carried out by 13 partner organisations, including the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) and Zoological Survey of India (ZSI).
- The assessments rely on three indices.
- Two of them are related to change in abundance — long-term trend (change over 30 years) and current annual trend (change over past seven years) — and the third is a measure of distribution range size in India.
- According to the report, long-term trends as well as current annual trends could not be established for many of the 942 species.
Key findings of the Report:
- Raptors, migratory shorebirds and ducks have declined the most.
- Of the 338 species, for which long-term trends have been identified:
- 204 or 60% have declined in the long term,
- 98 species are stable
- 36 have increased.
- Current annual trends could be determined for 359 species, of which:
- 142 species or 39% are declining,
- 64 are in rapid decline,
- 189 are stable and
- 28 bird species are increasing.
- The range size, or measurement of a bird species’ territory and home range, was assessed for all 942 bird species.
- The range size of 39% bird species is moderate,
- 33% is very large
- 28% species inhabit a “restricted and very restricted” area.
Birds that are declined are:
- Specialist birds (having narrow range),
- Shorebirds (migratory birds),
- Raptors (due to agro-chemicals),
- Vultures (White-rumped Vulture, Indian Vulture, and Red-headed Vulture),
- Birds that feed on invertebrates and insects,
- Woodpecker,
- Birds endemic to western ghats and Sri-Lanka biodiversity hotspots,
- Bustard species of birds (Great Indian Bustard, Lesser Florican and Bengal Florican).
Birds with stable population:
- Resident birds,
- Birds that feed on fruits and nectars,
- Generalist birds (having wide ranging habitats).
Birds with increasing populations:
- Several bird species such as the Indian Peafowl, Rock Pigeon, Asian Koel and House Crow are not healthy in both abundance and distribution, but showing “increasing trend”.
- Indian Peafowl:
- The Peafowl, India’s national bird, is one of the most rapidly increasing species in the country today.
- It is expanding into habitats where it has never occurred previously.
- In the last 20 years, Indian Peafowl has expanded into high Himalaya and the rainforests of the Western Ghats.
- It now occurs in every district in Kerala, a state where it was once extremely rare.
- Apart from expanding its range, it also appears to be increasing in population density in areas where it occurred earlier.
- The Asian Koel has shown a rapid increase in abundance of 75%, with an annual current increase of 2.7% per year.
- Similar increase is seen in the populations of House Crow, Rock Pigeon and the Alexandrine Parakeet.