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Rediff.com  » News » Indian warbler returns after 139 years

Indian warbler returns after 139 years

March 09, 2007 12:26 IST
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Ornithologists across the world are celebrating the news that a wetland bird, that has eluded scientists ever since its discovery in India in 1867, has been found again.

The large-billed reed-warbler is the world's least known bird. A single bird was collected in the Sutlej Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India, in 1867, but many had questioned whether it indeed represented a true species and wasn't just an aberrant individual of a common species, a release in Mumbai said.

But on March 27, 2006, ornithologist Philip Round, assistant professor in the Department of Biology, Mahidol University, was bird ringing (banding) at a wastewater treatment centre (the royally initiated Laem Phak Bia Environmental Research and Development Project) near Bangkok, Thailand, when he caught-a reed-warbler.

"Although reed-warblers are generally drab and look very similar, one of the birds I caught that morning struck me as very odd, something about it didn't quite add up. It had a long beak and short wings," said Round.

"Then, it dawned on me I was probably holding a large-billed reed-warbler. I was dumbstruck, it felt as if I was holding a living dodo. I knew it was essential to get cast-iron proof of its identity," added Round.

"I took many photographs, and carefully collected two feathers for DNA analysis, so as not to harm the bird," Round said.

Round contacted Professor Staffan Bensch, Lund University, Sweden, who had previously examined the Indian specimen and confirmed it did represent a valid species. He examined photographs and DNA of the Thai bird and confirmed the two were the same species, the release added.

"This rediscovery of the large-billed reed-warbler on the shores of Inner Gulf of Thailand (a BirdLife Important Bird Area, IBA) illustrates the importance of wetland habitats and the remarkable biodiversity they are home to," Kritsana Kaewplang, BCST director said.

"'It also demonstrates the contribution of routine monitoring and ringing of migratory birds at even well-known sites," Kaewplang said.

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