After the devastation
wrought by a drug on Asian vulture populations, a project hopes to begin
releasing captive-bred birds into the wild by 2016.The Saving Asia's Vultures from Extinction (Save) programme
says it plans to release up to 25 birds into a 30,000-sq-km drug-free
"safe zone".
Use of diclofenac in animals has been reported to have led to a sharp decline in the population in the Indian Subcontinent, a 95% decline in 2003, 99.9% decline as of 2008.Vultures eat the carcasses of livestock that have been administered veterinary diclofenac, and are poisoned by the accumulated chemical
The link between the anti-inflammatory drug, used to reduce swelling in injured or diseased animals, and the devastating demise of Asia's vulture populations was firmly established in 2004.
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