WORLD FIRST: Spoon-billed sandpiper chicks hatch in captivity11/07/2011 13:14:53Newly hatched hatched Spoon-billed sandpiper chick. Martin McGill (c) July 2011. The first critically endangered Spoon-billed sandpiper to hatch in captivity in the world was always going to be a spectacular sight, but when a Heritage Expeditions boat docked in Anadyr last night not one, not two, but an incredible 17 tiny, hatched Spoon-billed sandpiper chicks emerged. The incredibly ambitious mission to collect eggs from the rapidly dwindling number of nests on the breeding grounds in Chukotka and transport them thousands of miles via land, sea and air to the conservation breeding facility at WWT Slimbridge hatching has reached an important milestone. Chicks hatched at sea Things have gone as well as could possibly have been hoped for so far, but saving this species is still going to be an uphill battle. A couple of the hatchlings aren’t quite as strong as the others and we will have to accept that we will lose some. Martin McGill (c) Things have gone as well as could possibly have been hoped for so far, but saving this species is still going to be an uphill battle. A couple of the hatchlings aren't quite as strong as the others and we will have to accept that we will lose some. Only 10% survive to adulthood Elizabeth Tambovtseva from Birds Russia is part of the team on the expedition. She said: "The excitement from the team when the first egg hatched and a tiny chick appeared was off the scale - we haven't slept for days with the stress and worry so it was a pretty emotional experience. All the partners have been working hard as a team to pull off this very important stage of the mission and it's paid off. I didn't get a chance to celebrate my birthday last week, but this belated present more than makes up for that!" A newly hatched Spoon-billed sandpiper. Martin McGill (c) The conservation breeding expedition, led by staff from the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust (WWT) and Birds Russia, has support from the RSPB, BTO, BirdLife International, ArcCona, the Spoon-billed Sandpiper Task Force and Moscow Zoo. The project is funded by WWT and RSPB, with additional financial contributions and support from BirdLife International, the East-Asian Australasian Flyway Partnership, the Convention on Migratory Species, Heritage Expeditions and the Australasian Wader Study Group of Birds Australia. WWT has launched a public fundraising appeal to save the Spoon-billed sandpiper www.wwt.org.uk/SpoonbilledsandpiperAll this work has been going on and around a Heritage Expedition tripYou can join Heritage Expeditions in 2012 on their next expedition to help the Spoon-billed sandpiper, 24 June - 08 July 2012. From $7,300
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment