Published on: January 16, 2026
INDIA’S FIRST VULTURE CONSERVATION PORTAL
INDIA’S FIRST VULTURE CONSERVATION PORTAL
News: India’s first vulture conservation portal launched in Assam. Developed by We Foundation India in collaboration with Gauhati University (Dept. of Zoology)’
vulture conservation portal
- Aim: Build a national network of conservationists, researchers, academicians, students, and citizens to save vultures
- Launched ahead of International Vulture Awareness Day (1st Saturday of September).
- Portal will disseminate information in local languages (starting with Assamese) to involve grassroots communities.
Vultures Matter
- Ecological role: Scavengers → dispose of carcasses quickly.
- Prevent spread of diseases (anthrax, rabies, plague).
- Economic role: Reduce costs of carcass disposal.
- Prevent livestock-related epidemics → protects rural economy.
Vulture Crisis in India
- In the 1990s, India had 40 million vultures.
- By 2000s, numbers declined by 97-99%.
- Main reason: Diclofenac, a veterinary painkiller used in cattle.
- Harmless to cattle but fatal to vultures (causes kidney failure).
- Other threats: Habitat loss, electrocution from power lines, food scarcity (decline in free grazing cattle), poaching & poisoning
Conservation Efforts So Far
- Ban on Diclofenac (2006): Veterinary use prohibited; Meloxicam promoted as safe alternative.
- Vulture Safe Zones (VSZ): Declared in several states (Assam, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, etc.).
- Captive Breeding Centres: Established in Haryana (Pinjore), West Bengal, Assam, Madhya Pradesh.
- National Action Plan for Vulture Conservation (2020–25): Safe zones, captive breeding, awareness & monitoring.
- IUCN Status of Indian Vultures: White-rumped vulture, Slender billed vulture, Red-headed vulture → Critically Endangered.
Significance of the Portal
- First-of-its-kind platform for vulture conservation in India.
- Creates a network of organisations & individuals (e.g., Assam Bird Monitoring Network, LASA Foundation, Suraksha Samitee).
- Local language outreach: Ensures awareness among rural people who directly interact with livestock & carcasses.
- Promotes citizen science: Students, researchers, birdwatchers can share data.
- Supports policy inputs for better conservation measures.
