Published on: March 16, 2026

GREAT INDIAN BUSTARD (GIB)- CAPTIVE BREEDING PROGRAMME

GREAT INDIAN BUSTARD (GIB)- CAPTIVE BREEDING PROGRAMME

NEWS: Project Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Captive Breeding Programme has entered its fourth year with the hatching of two new chicks at the Conservation Breeding Centre in Rajasthan

ABOUT

  • The captive breeding initiativeà Critical insurance policy against the extinction of the GIB
  • Managed through a partnership between the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC)+ Rajasthan Forest Department+ the Wildlife Institute of India (WII).
  • Launchedà by the Rajasthan government in 2013, while the dedicated conservation breeding facilities became fully operational around 2019–2022.
  • Aimà To build a self-sustaining captive population of GIBs and eventually reintroduce them into the wild to bolster their dwindling numbers.

Key Features:

  • Utilizes both natural mating and advanced techniques like artificial insemination.
  • Combines habitat protection (In-situ) with breeding in controlled environments (Ex-situ).
  • This year marks a shift toward soft releasing captive-bred birds—a process where birds are gradually acclimated to the wild in protected enclosures before full release.
  • Receives technical support from the International Fund for Houbara Conservation (Abu Dhabi).

The Great Indian Bustard

  • One of the heaviest flying birds in the world and serves as an umbrella species
  • IUCN Red List: Critically Endangered (one step away from extinction in the wild).
  • Wildlife Protection Act (1972): Schedule I (highest level of legal protection).
  • CITES: Appendix I