“Endangered species at
home in Qatar”. A report by Fran Gillespie in the Gulf Times on 8th
December 2007
Brillantly coloured Birds of Paradise fly from tree to
tree in a vast aviary, their iridescent plumage glittering in the sunlight. Below them, pink flamingoes and white
spoonbills stalk the shallow waters of a pool, and the silence is broken by the
harsh cries of Red-tailed cockatoos.
All this under one roof? Yes, said Richard Switzer, the bird curator of the Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation near Shahaniya, in his presentation to members of the Qatar Natural History Group (QNHG) last Wednesday.
Unbelievable though it may seem, in the midst of the dry desert landscape is an oasis filled with mature trees and gardens, where some of the world’s rarest species of birds and animals are being successfully bred. Founded as a hobby farm by the father of the owner, a member of the ruling family, the Al Wabra reserve has now been transformed into a state-of-the-art breeding and research centre for endangered species. It currently holds more than 1,000 mammals and 700 birds, plus four species of reptiles.
Some of the breeding programmes at Al Wabra are unique, said Switzer. “We have
the only breeding herd in the world of the rare Beira antelope, with a current
population of about 50 animals.”
A small,
delicately-built antelope that inhabits the arid regions of Somalia and eastern
Ethiopia, the Beira is just one of several species of antelope, gazelle and
oryx held at Al Wabra.
Even rarer is the Spix’s
macaw, now extinct in its native Brazil. Its story is a sad one, typical of the
fate of so many parrots and macaws that have suffered from widespread trapping
for the exotic pet trade.
The introduction of the aggressive Africanised bee, which competed for nest
sites, stinging and killing breeding birds on their nests, also contributed to
its decline. The last wild male disappeared in October 2000.
Fewer than a hundred Spix’s macaws were in captivity world-wide, but the owner
of Al Wabra set about buying a number from private collections in the Philippines
and Switzerland, and a breeding programme to save the bird from total
extinction was begun.
Now, some 50 birds,
representing 75% of the entire known population of Spix’s macaws, are at Al
Wabra.
“It was not all plain sailing,” said Switzer. “Many of the birds we acquired
were diseased, and these had to be treated. “Every 12 months a vet comes over
from Germany to conduct a thorough check on our birds. But more serious is the
fact that because all the birds in captivity are probably descended from a few
individuals, there are inbreeding problems.
“There is the occasional
misshapen egg, chicks sometimes fail to hatch, and there are behavioural
problems.”
Despite these teething
problems, the future of the bird now seems assured, and their devoted carer
dreams of one day seeing them reintroduced to the wild. In 2006, 12 eggs were
laid, and removed to incubators for hatching. Seven chicks survived. In 2007,
32 eggs have been laid, and a higher percentage of chicks was successfully
reared.
“The work being
undertaken at Al Wabra is world-renowned, but here in Qatar has not been widely
publicised.
Al Wabra is not a zoo,
and visitors other than professional zoologists and animal management experts
are not generally admitted. There is a fear that infection could be introduced,
and breeding birds disturbed by too many people near their cages.
A constant dark shadow
on the horizon is the nightmare of avian flu, and the recent detection of this
in Saudi Arabia has brought this potentially disastrous disease a step nearer. The staff who care for
the birds of Al Wabra can only keep their fingers crossed and hope that their
highly successful breeding programmes will continue to save endangered species
for years to come. –
Fran Gillespie