Vultures in Nigeria – some missed opportunities?

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
PJ Mundy
{"title":"Vultures in Nigeria – some missed opportunities?","authors":"PJ Mundy","doi":"10.2989/00306525.2022.2076490","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Ostrich is co-published by NISC (Pty) Ltd and Informa UK Limited (trading as Taylor & Francis Group) The recent paper by Williams et al. (2021) certainly shows the vultures of Nigeria to be in dire straits. While there may still be some havens for vultures, such as the Yankari Game Reserve (Onoja et al. 2014) adjoining the authors’ study area of Plateau State, the Hooded Vulture Necrosyrtes monachus itself, once ubiquitous and abundant in the country, seems to be on its ‘last legs’. Nevertheless I think the authors have missed some opportunities to make their findings more precise, as follows. My strongest comment concerns the statement of Williams et al. (2021) that the decline of vultures has occurred in the ‘past 3–4 decades.’ I lived in Sokoto, northern Nigeria, in 1969–1972, and made a particular study of Hooded Vultures with my friend Allan Cook who lived there much longer. Our results are about to be submitted, but they comprised inter alia (i) counts of up to 1 500 at the town abattoir, (ii) counts of up to 100 at the main market, (iii) more than 300 nests found in and around the town, (iv) virtually no interference or persecution of vultures, or their nesting trees, or the eggs and chicks, (v) no discovery of vultures as food, and (vi) no dead or decapitated birds found (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.). Much later and on a visit to Ghana in 1996, we saw unmolested vultures at the abattoir on the beach west of Accra, birds nesting in leafy trees along a main road in Accra, and an estimated 500 circling over the abattoir at Kumasi (Anderson 1999; Mundy 2000). At the latter place, we even saw Hooded Vultures standing on the chopping blocks of the butchers and on top of open doors: there was no indication of persecution. Even in the Plateau State, study area of the paper, ‘huge numbers’ were once seen at the abattoirs. Given these observations, what has changed since the year 2000 (i.e. two decades ago), in terms of society at large, but its need for belief-based usage and even food consumption? So far this is the big missed opportunity — there is no consideration in the Williams et al. (2021) paper, let alone research into, any hypothesised societal changes over the decades. From a situation of huge numbers of Hooded Vultures in Nigeria in 1973 and subsequently, and through to similar numbers in Ghana in 1996, why is the situation now so ‘alarming’? Yes, there is a doubling of human numbers, greater political volatility and future uncertainty, more poverty; but are these the simple drivers? Fortunately, the Nigerian Conservation Foundation is working on education and awareness to correct ‘misguided conceptions’, as the paper recommended. These efforts must be supported if there is to be any hope for the survival of vultures in Nigeria. I think this year of 2000 was a threshold year for vultures in Nigeria, and perhaps for West Africa as a region: incredible numbers before and ‘drastic decline’ since. This tipping point needs further investigation. There are no vulture ‘restaurants’ in Nigeria, but plenty of abattoirs. Indeed, abattoirs handle carcasses almost daily, unlike the normal ‘restaurant’ which possibly produces carcasses weekly, and abattoirs are therefore very attractive to Hooded Vultures in particular. I have seen the birds at the Sokoto abattoir (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.), at abattoirs previously in Zimbabwe (Mundy 1997a), at Skukuza in the Kruger National Park (Mundy 1997b), and at Accra and Kumasi in Ghana (Mundy 2000); see also Friedman (2021). The Hooded Vulture gathers at abattoirs because there is food at these places, it is relaxed with humans, and it has meanwhile escaped from the dominance of the larger species of vulture, which normally out-compete it at carcasses. Therefore, it is essential that regular counts be made at several abattoirs throughout the country so as to give the species some kind of abundance rating, i.e. turning the qualitative ‘declining’ into something more quantitative. Can this opportunity be grasped? In addition, why are many vultures ‘found dead’ at abattoirs, a very worrying observation, and surely the result of poisoning? Throughout much of West Africa, and indeed most of Africa, Hooded Vultures breed (i.e. lay eggs) when the rains have finished (Mundy et al. 1992), and into the following dry season. This was certainly the case at Sokoto (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.). So I do not understand how the locals could link egg-laying to preventing the rains (Figure 3 in Williams et al. 2021), which have already well finished. Williams et al. (2021) should have clarified this misconception for the locals. There are other mis-conceptions by the locals that Williams et al. (2021) could have clarified with them, being Hooded Vultures on their own (almost never, they are a sociable species, though on occasions it will be alone; Mundy et al. 1992; ATK Lee, in litt.), and how to identify Commentary","PeriodicalId":1,"journal":{"name":"Accounts of Chemical Research","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":16.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Accounts of Chemical Research","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2989/00306525.2022.2076490","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"化学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ostrich is co-published by NISC (Pty) Ltd and Informa UK Limited (trading as Taylor & Francis Group) The recent paper by Williams et al. (2021) certainly shows the vultures of Nigeria to be in dire straits. While there may still be some havens for vultures, such as the Yankari Game Reserve (Onoja et al. 2014) adjoining the authors’ study area of Plateau State, the Hooded Vulture Necrosyrtes monachus itself, once ubiquitous and abundant in the country, seems to be on its ‘last legs’. Nevertheless I think the authors have missed some opportunities to make their findings more precise, as follows. My strongest comment concerns the statement of Williams et al. (2021) that the decline of vultures has occurred in the ‘past 3–4 decades.’ I lived in Sokoto, northern Nigeria, in 1969–1972, and made a particular study of Hooded Vultures with my friend Allan Cook who lived there much longer. Our results are about to be submitted, but they comprised inter alia (i) counts of up to 1 500 at the town abattoir, (ii) counts of up to 100 at the main market, (iii) more than 300 nests found in and around the town, (iv) virtually no interference or persecution of vultures, or their nesting trees, or the eggs and chicks, (v) no discovery of vultures as food, and (vi) no dead or decapitated birds found (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.). Much later and on a visit to Ghana in 1996, we saw unmolested vultures at the abattoir on the beach west of Accra, birds nesting in leafy trees along a main road in Accra, and an estimated 500 circling over the abattoir at Kumasi (Anderson 1999; Mundy 2000). At the latter place, we even saw Hooded Vultures standing on the chopping blocks of the butchers and on top of open doors: there was no indication of persecution. Even in the Plateau State, study area of the paper, ‘huge numbers’ were once seen at the abattoirs. Given these observations, what has changed since the year 2000 (i.e. two decades ago), in terms of society at large, but its need for belief-based usage and even food consumption? So far this is the big missed opportunity — there is no consideration in the Williams et al. (2021) paper, let alone research into, any hypothesised societal changes over the decades. From a situation of huge numbers of Hooded Vultures in Nigeria in 1973 and subsequently, and through to similar numbers in Ghana in 1996, why is the situation now so ‘alarming’? Yes, there is a doubling of human numbers, greater political volatility and future uncertainty, more poverty; but are these the simple drivers? Fortunately, the Nigerian Conservation Foundation is working on education and awareness to correct ‘misguided conceptions’, as the paper recommended. These efforts must be supported if there is to be any hope for the survival of vultures in Nigeria. I think this year of 2000 was a threshold year for vultures in Nigeria, and perhaps for West Africa as a region: incredible numbers before and ‘drastic decline’ since. This tipping point needs further investigation. There are no vulture ‘restaurants’ in Nigeria, but plenty of abattoirs. Indeed, abattoirs handle carcasses almost daily, unlike the normal ‘restaurant’ which possibly produces carcasses weekly, and abattoirs are therefore very attractive to Hooded Vultures in particular. I have seen the birds at the Sokoto abattoir (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.), at abattoirs previously in Zimbabwe (Mundy 1997a), at Skukuza in the Kruger National Park (Mundy 1997b), and at Accra and Kumasi in Ghana (Mundy 2000); see also Friedman (2021). The Hooded Vulture gathers at abattoirs because there is food at these places, it is relaxed with humans, and it has meanwhile escaped from the dominance of the larger species of vulture, which normally out-compete it at carcasses. Therefore, it is essential that regular counts be made at several abattoirs throughout the country so as to give the species some kind of abundance rating, i.e. turning the qualitative ‘declining’ into something more quantitative. Can this opportunity be grasped? In addition, why are many vultures ‘found dead’ at abattoirs, a very worrying observation, and surely the result of poisoning? Throughout much of West Africa, and indeed most of Africa, Hooded Vultures breed (i.e. lay eggs) when the rains have finished (Mundy et al. 1992), and into the following dry season. This was certainly the case at Sokoto (PJ Mundy and AW Cook, pers. obs.). So I do not understand how the locals could link egg-laying to preventing the rains (Figure 3 in Williams et al. 2021), which have already well finished. Williams et al. (2021) should have clarified this misconception for the locals. There are other mis-conceptions by the locals that Williams et al. (2021) could have clarified with them, being Hooded Vultures on their own (almost never, they are a sociable species, though on occasions it will be alone; Mundy et al. 1992; ATK Lee, in litt.), and how to identify Commentary
尼日利亚的秃鹫——错过了一些机会?
鸵鸟是由NISC (Pty) Ltd和Informa UK Limited(以Taylor & Francis Group的名义交易)共同出版的。Williams等人(2021)最近的论文肯定表明尼日利亚的秃鹫处于可怕的困境中。虽然可能仍然有一些秃鹫的避难所,如Yankari野生动物保护区(Onoja et al. 2014)毗邻作者在高原州的研究区域,但曾经在该国无处不在且数量众多的连帽秃鹫本身似乎已经奄奄一息。然而,我认为作者错过了一些使他们的发现更精确的机会,如下所示。我最强烈的评论是Williams等人(2021年)的说法,即秃鹫的数量在过去的3-4年里出现了下降。“1969年至1972年,我住在尼日利亚北部的索科托,并和我的朋友艾伦·库克(Allan Cook)一起对连帽秃鹫进行了专门的研究,他在那里住的时间要长得多。”我们的结果将提交,但由尤其(我)项多达500在屠宰场,(ii)主要市场数量高达100,(3)超过300巢中发现和镇(iv)几乎没有干扰或迫害的秃鹰,或者他们的嵌套树,或鸡蛋和小鸡,(v)没有发现秃鹫的食物,和(vi)没有发现死亡或斩首的小鸟(PJ Mundy, AW厨师,珀耳斯。奥林匹克广播服务公司)。很久以后,在1996年访问加纳时,我们在阿克拉西部海滩上的屠宰场看到了不受干扰的秃鹫,在阿克拉主干道旁的树叶上筑巢的鸟,在库马西的屠宰场上空盘旋的估计有500只秃鹫(Anderson 1999;曼迪2000)。在后一个地方,我们甚至看到戴着兜帽的秃鹫站在屠夫的砧板上和敞开的门上:没有迫害的迹象。即使在高原州,论文的研究区域,也曾在屠宰场看到“大量”的动物。鉴于这些观察结果,自2000年(即20年前)以来,就整个社会而言,除了对基于信仰的使用甚至食物消费的需求之外,发生了什么变化?到目前为止,这是一个错失的大机会——威廉姆斯等人(2021)的论文中没有考虑到这一点,更不用说研究几十年来任何假设的社会变化了。从1973年尼日利亚的大量秃鹫到随后的1996年加纳的类似数量,为什么现在的情况如此“令人担忧”?是的,人口数量翻了一番,政治动荡和未来不确定性加剧,贫困加剧;但这些是简单的驱动因素吗?幸运的是,尼日利亚自然保护基金会正致力于教育和意识,以纠正“被误导的观念”,正如这篇论文所建议的那样。如果尼日利亚的秃鹫有任何生存的希望,这些努力必须得到支持。我认为2000年对于尼日利亚的秃鹫来说是一个转折点,也许对于整个西非地区来说也是如此:之前秃鹫的数量惊人,之后秃鹫数量急剧下降。这个临界点需要进一步调查。尼日利亚没有秃鹫“餐馆”,但有很多屠宰场。事实上,屠宰场几乎每天都要处理尸体,不像普通的“餐馆”可能每周都要处理尸体,因此屠宰场对连帽秃鹫特别有吸引力。我在索科托的屠宰场见过这些鸟(PJ Mundy和AW Cook, pers)。)、以前在津巴布韦的屠宰场(1997年1月1日)、克鲁格国家公园的斯库库扎(1997年2月1日)和加纳的阿克拉和库马西(2000年1月1日);另见Friedman(2021)。秃鹫聚集在屠宰场,因为那里有食物,它和人类在一起很放松,同时它也逃离了大型秃鹫的统治,后者通常会在尸体上与它竞争。因此,必须在全国各地的几个屠宰场进行定期计数,以便给物种提供某种丰度评级,即将定性的“下降”转变为更多的定量。这个机会能抓住吗?此外,为什么许多秃鹫在屠宰场“被发现死亡”,这是一个非常令人担忧的观察结果,肯定是中毒的结果?在西非的大部分地区,实际上是非洲的大部分地区,秃鹫在雨季结束后繁殖(即产卵)(Mundy et al. 1992),并进入下一个旱季。在索科托(PJ Mundy和AW Cook),情况当然如此。奥林匹克广播服务公司)。因此,我不明白当地人如何将产卵与防雨联系起来(Williams et al. 2021的图3),这已经完成了。Williams等人(2021)应该为当地人澄清这种误解。威廉姆斯等人(2021)本可以向他们澄清当地人的其他误解,他们是连帽秃鹫(几乎从来没有,他们是一个社会性的物种,尽管有时会独自一人;Mundy et al. 1992;ATK Lee, in lit .),以及如何识别评论
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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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