Due to increasing habitat loss driven by climate change, deforestation and poaching, the population of wild pheasants in Pakistan is under persistent threat, according to Mohebullah Naveed, a wildlife expert in the capital Islamabad.
“Pheasants cannot thrive without their habitat,” Naveed, who is associated with a pheasant conservation project, told Anadolu.
Depletion of forest cover due to climate change and increasing housing and agriculture needs are primary reasons for the wild bird’s dwindling numbers, he said.
While all native pheasant species are protected under local wildlife laws, hunting and poaching are an equally major threat to two main pheasant species in Pakistan, he said.
“Poaching and hunting are mostly done by locals living close to the (pheasant) habitats. They enjoy this as a sport, although hunting pheasants is illegal,” said Naveed, who serves as a wildlife conservation officer with the Himalayan Wildlife Foundation, an Islamabad-based wildlife group. Another motive behind the poaching and hunting of pheasants is their prized bush meat and beautiful feathers that are used in traditional hats in parts of northern Pakistan, he said.
In addition, disturbances caused during the collection of medicinal plants in the summer are also a factor, he added.
Endangered and vulnerable: Pakistan is home to six pheasant species: the western horned tragopan (Tragopan melanocephalus), Himalayan monal (Lophura impejanus), koklass pheasant (Pucrasia macrolopha), white-crested kalij (Lophura leucomelanos), Indian peafowl (Pavo cristatus) and cheer pheasant (Catreus wallichii).
Sprawling forests in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region are home to wild pheasants. Cheer pheasants and western horned tragopans are the rarest and most threatened species in Pakistan, while others still have viable populations, Muhammad Naeem Awan, director of research and conservation at the World Pheasant Association’s Pakistan chapter, told Anadolu. These two species have been classified as “endangered” and “vulnerable” and are on the Red List of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), according to Awan, who is also a member of the IUCN’s Species Survival Commission.
“The population of these two species is on the decline and the situation demands urgent measures,” he warned, asserting that they should be declared “priority species” by the government to bolster efforts to revive their population.
Public awareness and engagement in conservation efforts are also essential for “long-term success,” he said.
Supporting the argument, Naveed called for habitat preservation and restoration to be a top priority.
“To protect and revive wild pheasant populations, conservation efforts should focus on habitat preservation and restoration, ensuring diverse and natural environments for feeding and breeding,” he said. “Implementing sustainable agricultural practices, creating protected areas and planting native vegetation will support their habitats.” Additionally, he said, strict control on poaching, managing predator populations, and breeding pheasants in captivity for reintroduction into the wild could help boost their numbers.
Extinction will be ‘disastrous’: There have been no detailed surveys recently in Pakistan to ascertain the current population status of wild pheasant species, according to Jamshed Iqbal Choudhry, an official at the World Wide Fund for Nature – Pakistan (WWF-Pakistan).
However, he said, four species still have “viable” populations, especially in protected areas such as Ayubia National Park in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Margalla Hills National Park in Islamabad.
“There is a need to conduct detailed surveys in known potential sites and to explore new areas for their conservation,” he said. Supporting the view, Naveed said some surveys have been carried out in a few selected areas for certain species, but in the context of the whole of Pakistan, “it’s hard to estimate their current numbers.” The extinction of wild pheasants would be “disastrous” because they play a crucial role in maintaining the balance of ecosystems, he said.
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