The Socotra Cormorant (Phalacrocorax nigrogularis) is endemic to

the Arabian peninsula. There are now only thirteen or fourteen

colonies extant from a historical minimum of 28 formerly occupied

sites: just one or two of the presently known breeding colonies

lying outside the Arabian Gulf.

In the winter breeding season of 1994/95 a coordinated international

effort was made by all Gulf States to accurately census those

remaining colonies and monitor breeding performance. This involved

researchers in Saudi Arabia (3 colonies), Bahrain (1), Qatar (1)

and the United Arab Emirates (7). The Arabian Gulf breeding population

is now, for the first time, accurately known. A minimum of 220,000

pairs were found with nearly three-quarters of this total breeding

on the Hawar Islands. Both Saudi Arabia and the UAE support around

32,000 pairs. To our knowledge the Gulf of Oman population was

uncounted but one of the sites may possibly still hold 3000 –

6000 pairs. The Socotra Cormorant is extinct as a breeding species

in Kuwait and breeding is unconfirmed in Iran since 1972.

The breeding biology, currently being investigated in Saudi Arabia,

is complicated apparently by sequential breeding, with a great

deal of asynchrony in any one colony, and by a large number of

relays. Sequential breeding allows a greater number of pairs to

occupy a single island than might otherwise be accommodated at

any one time. This is likely to prove to be a useful adaptation

since there are fears for the successful conservation of this

species.

In view of the small number of colonies, and despite a world population

estimated to lie between 600,000 and 1 million individuals, the

Socotra Cormorant is coming under increased threat. It continues

to be persecuted and has been evicted from several breeding sites

by development. It is not known, nor will it ever be, whether

displaced birds were able to relocate or were successfully absorbed

by other existing colonies. Squeezing into a smaller number of

sites may be one answer, if resources allow; but it would be far

more desirable to protect extant colonies. Development and birds

are not mutually exclusive but the Arabian Gulf, with over 95

per cent of the world population of Socotra Cormorants, is rapidly

running out of suitably managed and sympathetically developed,

or better still, undeveloped, islands.