Great Indian Bustard: Love in the Time of Habitat Loss
Photo StoryPublished : May 23, 2020Updated : Sep 24, 2023
They may be critically endangered, but courtship rituals during breeding season are as flamboyant as ever
Text by: Sustain Team
They may be critically endangered, but courtship rituals during breeding season are as flamboyant as ever
Sex is serious business in the animal kingdom, and nature — as always — displays a healthy diversity when it comes to breeding and bonding practices. Some species, like sarus cranes and black vultures, are monogamous breeders that stick with a single partner for life. Other birds display annual monogamy, which means a pair bonds for a single breeding season. There are also animals that practice polyandry (one female mating with many males), and polygyny (one male with many females).
The great Indian bustard belongs to the last of this category. During breeding season, male bustards flock to areas called “display grounds” where they demonstrate their physique, stamina, and chutzpah by raising their tails, showing off plumage, and making loud calls that can be heard over 500 m away.
It can be quite a spectacle since bustards are large birds — among the heaviest flying species on the planet — with adults growing up to four feet in height. Great Indian bustards are grassland inhabitants that once roamed across much of India. Passionate ornithologist and conservationist Dr Asad Rahmani recalls seeing the bird for the first time in April 1981, in place called Sonkhaliya in Rajasthan. “I saw about 14 of them,” he said, recalling “their magnificent display, and that haughty look they gave when disturbed by humans.”
At the time, there were between 80 and 100 bustards in Sonkhaliya. Today, their numbers are so low, the species is categorised as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. There are between 100 to 150 birds in all of India, “and no GIB left in Sonkhaliya,” says Dr Rahmani. There is no doubt that this is a vulnerable species, some say on the brink of extinction, but “its persistent survival, despite the odds,” is also admirable, he adds. Long story short: “Everything about the great Indian bustard is great.”
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Sustain Team
We are a driven group of people from diverse backgrounds, bound by an abiding love for India’s natural world.