Hering’s census in March after the 6-year loophole, will include Haryana, 12 other states – News2IN
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Hering’s census in March after the 6-year loophole, will include Haryana, 12 other states

Hering's census in March after the 6-year loophole, will include Haryana, 12 other states
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Haryana will be among 13 states that will take part in the national hering census in March next year.
The team will travel around 11,000 km in this road-based survey.
Such census was carried out in 2015.
Scientists at the Natural History Society (BNHS) Bombay (BNHS), a wildlife research organization, believed that the Nasar population had set for years.
But they also showed that since the growth of slow species, it might need a decade again to find out whether conservation efforts for years have indeed bear fruit.
“The survey will be carried out between March and June next year.
We should have conducted a census last year, but failed to take off because of a pandemic,” said Vibhu Prakash, Director of BNHS and a specialist at the Nasar bird study.
Apart from BNHS, teams from 13 states and ministries of the environment, forests and climate change will take part in the exercise.
Besides Haryana, the census will be carried out in Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya.
There will be around 2,000 teams that will take part in the survey.
Experts claim that the NASAR is, whose number decreases over the past few decades has increased the alarm among environmental lovers, making a comeback in the wild.
Vulture Egypt, originating from the area, has been seen several times in the Manggrega Bani area in Aravalis.
“There is stability in the sightings of Egyptian hiering in Aravalis.
But the variation in the amount is not large.
The decision to stop the use of dichlofenac drugs in livestock must help a hering bird make a comeback.
But it will require more years for a loud population to grow significantly,” said PANKAJ Gupta, a member of the Delhi bird community.
In the 1990s, the number of Herman bird species has decreased significantly.
One of the reasons associated with this sudden decline is that birds are fed livestock carcasses that have been injected with Diklofenac.
“Diclofenac is a general anti-inflammatory drug given to livestock.
But many nasar birds are poisoned to death when they feed cattle injected with drugs.
However, we recently observed that nimesulide, animal pain relief, is also a cause A number of hiering deaths.
This is not only diklofenak, but other drugs used in livestock are also responsible for the deaths of birds, “Prakash said.
According to the Ministry of Wildlife, Himalaya Griffon – a hiering bird whose white grass – and the old hiering bird was billed was also seen in this region recently.
This NASAR channel breeds in temperate and migrated to the south every year.
The presence of scavengers such as nasar birds also signifies a healthy ecosystem …

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