City
Epaper

Yadav names slender-billed vulture chick as Jeevan

By IANS | Updated: February 22, 2023 17:45 IST

Chandigarh, Feb 22 Union Environment, Forest and Climate Change Minister Bhupender Yadav during his visit to the Vulture ...

Open in App

Chandigarh, Feb 22 Union Environment, Forest and Climate Change Minister Bhupender Yadav during his visit to the Vulture Conservation and Breeding Centre in Pinjore in Haryana has named a slender-billed vulture chick as Jeevan, the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) said on Wednesday.

"Jeevan the slender-billed vulture chick named by Hon. Bhupendra Yadavji during his visit to our Vulture Conservation Breeding Centre in Pinjore on February 20, 2023. We shall raise Jeevan at our centre, release it to the wild and fulfil the dream of our Hon. Minister," the BNHS said in a tweet.

During his visit to the centre, Yadav said the vultures may be released in the wild after breeding. He also assured technical and financial support for the development of the Jatayu Vulture Breeding Centre.

It is proposed to release oriental white-backed vultures in year 2023-24 in the wild. The released birds will be monitored closely for at least a year with satellite transmitters and will look for any behaviour problems to make sure that they adjust well to the wild conditions and there is no mortality due to diclofenac poisoning.

Thereafter the birds would be released regularly in the wild every year.

Vultures were very common in India till the 1980's. During this period, the population of the three resident Gyps species the oriental white-backed, the long-billed and the slender-billed in the country was estimated at 40 million individuals.

The overall population however crashed by over 90 per cent during the mid-90's.

To save them from certain extinction, the Union government's Action Plan for Vulture Conservation in India, 2020-2025 advocates the prevention of misuse of veterinary non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) by ensuring their sale only on prescription.

The vulture conservation plan with an outlay of Rs 207.50 crore, part of the Gandhinagar Declaration adopted by CMS Parties in 2020, also strongly recommends that veterinary treatment should be given only by qualified veterinar which would prevent overuse of NSAIDs in treating livestock as toxicity of most of the drugs is dose dependent.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indiachandigarhCMSBhupender YadavBombay Natural History SocietyChandigarh union territoryIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia india
Open in App

Related Stories

OpinionsWhy is Trump So Upset with India?

MumbaiUniversity of Bristol Chooses Mumbai for Its First Overseas Campus, Set to Open in September 2026

NationalRaksha Bandhan 2025: Now You Can Send a Rakhi to Your Brother in India Post's Waterproof Envelope — Here's How to Track Your Parcel

NationalGold in Dubai Cheaper Than India: Pricing, Rules, and Import Limits Explained

NationalIndia Spends ₹1.38 Lakh Crore Annually on Edible Oil Imports

National Realted Stories

NationalAmit Malviya highlights attack on Hindu women in Kolkata refusing to chant religious slogans

NationalStart-up surge and heritage pride define Kashmir’s post-370 transformation

NationalBRS MLAs submit petition at Gandhi statue over disqualification plea

NationalSC has realised Bengal govt's tactics to delay hearing on DA issue: CPI(M) RS MP

NationalPresident Droupadi Murmu pays last respects to Shibu Soren at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, offers condolences to family