Hot
Spots for Bird
Watchers
by Dr. Mike Evans
Picture by NCWCD
of this article, Dr Mike Evans, has recently completed work on a massive
study of important bird areas in the Middle East (see book-reviews). Arabian
Wildlife invited him to tell us exactly what this entailed.
When
I started my new job at the headquarters of BirdLife International in Cambridge,
UK, two and a half years ago, my enthusiasm for the new project facing
me was mingled with more than a little trepidation. Lying before me, on
my desk, was a bright orange and rather dauntingly thick paperback book,
Important Bird Areas in Europe, whose 888 pages described 2,444 of the
most important sites for birds in 32 European countries. The publication
of the book had helped to focus the efforts of bird conservation groups
throughout Europe and had been widely cited as a successful marriage between
science and management in wildlife conservation.
My own task was to co-ordinate the completion of a similar kind of book
for the Middle East, as part of BirdLife International’s longer term aim
to identify all of the important bird areas in the world before the end
of the millennium. Important Bird Areas of the Middle East had been on
the drawing board as a project proposal for a number of years, and had
finally secured funding from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds,
the BirdLife International partner in the UK, after money had been donated
by its members and by the general public following the emergency created
by the Gulf War oil pollution.
Any wildlife conservation action today usually has as its ultimate aim
one of three different targets, all of them being necessary and complementary:
the conservation of species, sites, and ecosystems. The IBA book is designed
as an aid to the second approach, site conservation. For many countries
in the Middle East, a large amount of information has accumulated regarding
which birds occur at which sites, but this is distributed within many different
books, journals, note-books and other even more arcane sources, often unpublished
or only available with difficulty. The aim of the IBA project was to sort
through this huge and unmanageable mass of information, so as to come up
with a clear and up to date picture of the priorities for site conservation
in the Middle East, to provide guidance to all people and agencies planning
to take actions to conserve birds and other wildlife in the region. The
project aimed to answer questions such as: which are the most important
sites, why are they important, where are they, which ones are safe for
the moment and which are immediately threatened, and so on.
But how does one choose which are the most “important” sites
for birds, or decide that a site is “not important”, in a way
that can be accepted by all parties? This is partly a question of scale,
and BirdLife International decided that its role was to identify and list
only those sites which were important on a regional (Middle Eastern) or
global level, excluding those sites which were important at a local or
national level.
After consultations in the region, sites were considered “important”
if they supported species threatened with global extinction (Red Data Book
species) or with extinction in the Middle East, or if they supported particularly
large numbers of a species (usually waterfowl or seabirds, since these
show the greatest tendency to congregate at sites), or if they supported
particularly good numbers of Middle Eastern `endemic’ birds, i.e. those
species whose world populations are restricted to the Middle East and for
which the Middle Eastern countries therefore have most responsibility for
preserving, in any contribution to maintaining global biodiversity.
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International wanted this to be more than a mere desk study – by putting
responsibility for the data collection into the hands of conservationists
living and working in-country, wherever possible, it was intended that
these people, at the sharp end of conservation action in the region, would
be more likely to feel that the book was `theirs’ and to actually use it
in taking action to conserve the most vulnerable sites in the region. In
the event, more than 65 people in the Middle East contributed details on
391 Important Bird Areas, ranging from staff of wildlife reserves to government
scientists, and from amateur bird watchers to hunters concerned about declining
bird numbers. Birds do not respect national frontiers, and their successful
conservation demands that such major demonstrations of regional cooperation
be made.
The variety of sites in the inventory was eye-opening, even to someone
who has worked and travelled in the Middle East. It is perhaps invidious
to single out any for special mention, since they are all equally important
in their own ways. However, some of them stick particularly in my memory,
even though I haven’t visited them. The ice-age refuge of Shallal ad-Dahna,
high in the Asir mountains of Saudi Arabia, with its juniper woodland,
permanent streams and relict populations of northern, temperate zone animals
such as the magpie. Or the rocky, monsoon lashed coast of southern Oman
with its unique cold water up welling offshore, which supports kelp beds,
abalones and possibly even breeding humpback whales – sounding more like
northern California than Arabia.
Publication of Important Bird
Areas in the Middle East should add further emphasis to the efforts already
underway throughout the region to conserve the natural heritage of the
Middle East.