On Big Birding Day (Saturday, December 2) Shamwari Private Game Reserve celebrated the re-introduction of the Red-billed oxpecker to the reserve and by extension the Eastern Cape.
After the vast herds of game, once prevalent in the region, were all but wiped out in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, oxpecker numbers declined. The use of arsenic-based dips for cattle, sealed their fate and the species became extinct in the Eastern Cape.
Ecologist, John O’Brien, flew to the Kruger National Park to collect what he thought would be 100 birds. In the event there were only 52.
After the expense of chartering the aircraft and having waited five years to ensure the conditions were optimum, there was a lot of anxiety about releasing the birds at Shamwari. The conservation team picked what they thought was the ideal spot, an open area with plenty of grazing mammals around.
But when they opened the cages all 52 birds headed straight back in the direction of the Kruger. That was, until one looked around and saw a giraffe and the others followed. That small conservation miracle resulted in the successful reintroduction of the species to the Eastern Cape.
Now the conservation team is looking to bring back another bird species, which suffered the same fate as the oxpecker after the demise of wild herds and the use of arsenic cattle dips.
In late January the first tranche of 155 Cape vultures will move from VulPro’s existing conservation and breeding facility at Hartbeespoort to a purpose-built centre at Shamwari. This will mark the start of what is the largest relocation of vultures ever undertaken.
The Cape vultures’ offspring will be released on Shamwari, reintroducing the species to the reserve and the Eastern Cape.
Joe Cloete, Shamwari CEO, said in conservation terms the project was as significant as anything that had been done on the reserve over the past 30 years.
“Vultures play a vital role in maintaining a healthy ecosystem, are part of our natural heritage and are severely threatened. I cannot overstate how reintroducing Cape vultures is a critical step in the continuing evolution of our conservation journey and enhancing the ecological importance of the reserve,” Cloete said.