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Indonesia’s birds being wiped out by pet trade

  • Trade has decimated populations of the Javan hawk-eagle, Javan green magpie, helmeted hornbill, silvery woodpigeon, yellow-crested cockatoo, scarlet-breasted lorikeet, black-winged myna, Bali myna, straw-headed bulbul, Javan white-eye, rufous-fronted laughingthrush, Sumatran laughingthrush and the Javan sparrow in the wild, new study has found.
  • The disappearance of a bird species due to trade can have a knock-on effect on other species, the researchers say, in which trappers and traders look for the next-best and more readily available species to replace the one in decline.
  • Unfortunately, governments and even conservation organizations often don’t view this issue as a high priority, TRAFFIC’s Director for Southeast Asia said, which hampers efforts to prevent further losses.

Birds are hugely popular pets in Indonesia.

A 2011 study found, for instance, that more than one-third of households in the six biggest cities of Java and Bali kept birds as pets. Most of these pet birds are caught from the wild.

Conservationists say that the popularity of bird-keeping in Indonesia has been driving the over-collection of birds from the wild. Now, a new study published in Forktail has identified 13 species and 14 subspecies of birds found in Sundaic Indonesia — Sumatra, Java, Bali and Indonesian Borneo (Kalimantan) — that are at serious risk of extinction due to such over-harvesting. This list is a conservative one, researchers say.

“Whether its species or subspecies, the message is the same: excessive trade is wiping out Indonesia’s wild bird species at an alarming rate” Chris Shepherd, TRAFFIC’s Director for Southeast Asia, and a co-author of the study, said in a statement.

Domestic and international trade has decimated populations of this critically endangered bird. Less than 100 individuals are estimated to occur in the wild. Photo by Woldere, Wikimedia Commons, GFDL License.
Domestic and international trade has decimated populations of this critically endangered bird. Less than 100 individuals are estimated to occur in the wild. Photo by Woldere, Wikimedia Commons, GFDL License.

Trade has decimated populations of Indonesia’s national bird — the Javan hawk-eagle — for example.

Known to occur in Java’s forested patches in Java, only 300 to 500 mature individuals of this rare, endangered bird survive in the wild, the study says. Experts estimate that every year, about 30 to 40 individuals of this species are removed from the wild for the pet trade, equivalent to the number of individuals born each year. Deforestation is currently low in Java, the authors say, which suggests that trade is the most serious threat to this species.

Another bird at risk of being wiped out due to the pet trade is the critically endangered Javan green magpie (Cissa thalassina). According to the study, “evidence that the species persists in the wild comes from its occasional presence in urban bird markets or in roadside cages”.

The white-rumped shama — not currently listed as a threatened species in the IUCN Red List — is also a popular cagebird in Indonesia, prized for its “extraordinary song”.

The shama’s popularity in bird singing competitions in Java, resulted in a “dramatic” rise in the caging of the bird between 1996 and 2006, the study says. In 2006 alone, more than 120,000 white-ruped shama were estimated to be captive in six cities on Java and Bali. Rising demand for this species, combined with the ease of trapping it, has caused widespread local extinctions of its populations across Indonesia, the authors write.

The helmeted hornbill is threatened by hunters who shoot these birds for their casques. Photo by Doug Janson, Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0.
The helmeted hornbill is threatened by hunters who shoot these birds for their casques. Photo by Doug Janson, Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 3.0.

Pet trade threatens several other species of birds, including the silvery woodpigeon, yellow-crested cockatoo, scarlet-breasted lorikeet, black-winged myna, Bali myna, straw-headed bulbul, Javan white-eye, rufous-fronted laughingthrush, Sumatran laughingthrush  and the Javan sparrow.

The critically endangered helmeted hornbill is also at risk of extinction, but it faces threats of a different kind. The bird is highly prized among hunters for its casque (solid helmet-like structure on its bill), which is used by the Chinese as a substitute for elephant ivory. According to BirdLife, as many as 500 birds were being killed every month in 2013, in West Kalimantan, resulting in an annual loss of 6,000 individuals.

Other than decimating wild populations, bird trade can also result in genetic contamination, the study warns. Sometimes, “exotic” species — birds imported to areas in which they are not native — can accidentally escape or are deliberately released. These birds can then outcompete the native species and put their populations at risk, the authors write.

For example, various species of Acridotheres myna have been imported into Java and escaped, the study notes, “putting great pressure on whatever native populations remain of the endemic (but itself elsewhere exotic) Javan or White-vented Myna”.

The disappearance of a bird species due to trade can also have a knock-on effect on other species.

“When popular birds become scarce and too expensive, trappers and traders look for the next-best and more readily available species, such as Grey-cheeked Bulbul substituting for Straw-headed Bulbul in West Kalimantan,” the authors write.

To avoid the impending extinction of the birds listed in the study, the authors recommend improving law enforcement, increasing public awareness, in-situ management of populations, and commercial breeding. Sometimes, bird trappers in Indonesia have been converted into full-time guides for birdwatching tourists, resulting in a “higher, more reliable income, easier, more sustainable life-style and a genuine interest in conservation.” Such a tactic could work in some cases, the study suggests.

But governments and even conservation organizations often don’t view this issue as a high priority, Shepherd said, despite the scale and consequences of the bird trade. “This hampers efforts to prevent further losses.”

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