BirdLife: The Magazine April-June 2019 | Page 16

FEATURE Like many species that frequent the Asian- Australasian Flyway, the Great Knot Calidris tenuirostris (Endangered) is already feeling the strain of habitat loss: hunting is an unwelcome added pressure Photo JJ Harrison 0 Lake Burullus, for example, is utterly daunting in scale. “Almost half-a-million birds being extracted from a single spot every year is a huge, nerve-wracking phenomenon,” laments Alex Ngari, BirdLife’s Africa Flyways Coordinator. And yet Lake Burullus is only ninth on the list. The top eight spaces are occupied by locations in Cyprus (two), Egypt (one), Lebanon (two) and Syria (three). The worst of the problem areas is Famagusta in Cyprus, where an average of 689,000 birds are estimated to be killed illegally each year. Across northern and central Europe and the Caucasus, far fewer birds are illegally killed. But here, too, the unlawful killing is concentrated. The six worst locations are all in a single country, Azerbaijan. The top 20 overall are crammed into just five more: Armenia, Bulgaria, Georgia, Germany and the Netherlands. Thus far, you would be forgiven for thinking illegal bird killing to be a problem solely in and around Europe. But despite scant current evidence, there are ample indications that huge “ Almost half-a-million birds being extracted from a single spot every year is a huge, nerve-wracking phenomenon “ ALEX NGARI FLYWAYS COORDINATOR, BIRDLIFE AFRICA 16 numbers of birds are being killed worldwide. BirdLife will soon publish their investigation into illegal bird killing in the Arabian Peninsula, Iran and Iraq. And the issue spreads further still. “We have received information that the inner Niger delta is a hotspot for avian slaughter”, says Ngari. “We need to investigate what is happening in the rest of the African continent. This could be the tip of the iceberg.” Turning our attention to Asia, at spots across Sumatra (Indonesia), local people hunt the Eyebrowed Thrush Turdus obscurus, shorebirds such as the Great Knot Calidris tenuirostris (Endangered), and waterbirds. In the Philippines, migrants funnelling through Luzon’s mountains have been taken by local people for decades. It remains to be determined whether such killing is within the law. In parts of south and east China, shorebirds migrating along the East Asian- Australasian flyway are certainly illegally mist- netted for food. In 2013, Chinese authorities seized two million songbirds in a single raid – Yellow-breasted Bunting Emberiza aureola (Critically Endangered and considered a delicacy in Cantonese cuisine) among them. Asia’s problem is sufficiently worrying for BirdLife to help the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership and Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) to establish a task force on illegal hunting and trade. In parts of the Americas, including Barbados, migratory waders are hunted. “Birds are being killed everywhere,” says Van den Bossche, “but outside countries with strong legislation, it is less straightforward to determine what is legal BIRDLIFE • APR-JUN 2019