In face of what has become a precipitous slide toward extinction across the Asian continent, the vultures of Cambodia have persisted, giving conservationists hope that these important scavengers can come back from the brink, according to authors from the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Royal Government of Cambodia, and other groups in a new study.
The creation of new feeding stations, or vulture restaurants, and the restoration of populations of depleted wildlife species represent the next important steps in vulture conservation, the study says.
The extreme importance of Cambodias vulture population was created by an ecological disaster across Asia due largely to the veterinary drug diclofenac. Widely used as an anti-inflammatory drug for cattle in South Asia, diclofenac is toxic to vultures, causing death through renal failure and visceral gout to birds that feed on the cattle carcasses. It has led to a global population declines higher than 99 percent in some vulture species.
The slender-billed vulture, white-rumped vulture, and red-headed vulture are all listed as Critically Endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
> Related: More Pictures by Wildlife Conservation Society
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