Death flight for birds


Migration-route ambush provides rich pickings, reports Yang Wanli in Hunan province.

On an early October morning in the Luoxiao Mountains of Central China's Hunan province, the world was barely awake as Li Feng made his way through the clinging mists that blanketed the slopes and headed for the summit, a camera hidden in his pocket.

The surrounding area is pitted with hundreds of small caves, their entrances camouflaged by pine branches. The caves offer shelter to local hunters and Li, a photographer at a local newspaper and a volunteer for an NGO, the Hunan Bird Protection Camp, is taking a risk as he attempts to record their illegal activity. The hunters have a reputation for taking matters into their own hands when dealing with intruders.

Having reached the hilltop and taken photos of the scenery and the few birds in sight, Li hid his camera and, looking like any other fell walker taking a stroll, waited for sundown.

Fast-forward several hours: Shortly after nightfall, dozens of bright white spotlights were turned on simultaneously.

The lights attract the birds and soon the air is filled with the percussion of thousands of beating wings. The birds - including red-crowned cranes, Tibetan cranes, spot-billed ducks, greenwing and great egrets - from North China and even Siberia, are undertaking their twice-yearly migration to the warmer climes.

As they flew into range the guns fired. Continuously. The lights confuse the birds and encourage them to fly at lower altitudes, making them easy targets for the hunters. Those unscathed by the gunfire often end up entangled in the nets the hunters set up across the mountaintops. Escape is impossible.

Internet movie

At 11:30 on a Friday morning, Li was still in bed. During the past few days, he had been inundated with requests for interviews from newspapers, radio and television programs and he was exhausted.

"The State Forestry Administration is investigating the issue, and we want to hear a result before taking any further action," he said, his voice sounding sleepy on the other end of the phone.

Li's NGO sponsored a four-day trip to Hunan's rural areas, starting on Oct 26, to advocate greater protection for wild birds. Li's involvement was crucial - his reputation had been enhanced by a movie he made and posted on the Internet in September. The film, A Massacre on the Millennium Bird Trail, catapulted Li from local photographer to a national name, as it revealed the gruesome reality behind the slaughter of thousands of birds during the migration seasons in some parts of the province.

The 12-minute documentary has attracted attention from both environmentalists and the general public, and so far almost 430,000 people across China have watched the movie.

The film and local reports of the slaughter prompted Hunan's forestry authorities to launch a monthlong crackdown on illegal bird hunts. By Oct 25, 133 people had been detained on suspicion of participating in illegal bird hunts during the past five years.

Hu Changqing, deputy head of the Hunan Provincial Forestry Department, said that 92 cases have already been dealt with, and more than 115,000 captured birds had been released into the wild.

The State Forestry Administration issued an emergency nationwide ban on the hunting of migratory birds and other wildlife on Oct 24. It urged local forestry officials and police to strengthen law enforcement to protect wildlife and take greater precautions against poaching and the destruction of habitats. The authorities will also inspect markets, restaurants and hotels to ensure they are not engaged in the sale or consumption of migratory species.

The final journey

Every year, billions of birds across the globe follow established migration patterns from north and south. From early October to December, birds from Eastern Europe, Mongolia and Northern China fly to South Asia via the "Millennium Bird Trail" which passes through Hunan and its neighboring province, Jiangxi. Three of the world's eight major migratory routes pass through China.

The geological conditions in Hunan and Jiangxi make the provinces the only path for southbound migratory birds. "The wintering grounds may vary from place to place, year to year, but the route never changes," said Jiang Yong, who heads the office of the Worldwide Fund For Nature in Changsha, the provincial capital.

Migration is a well-known phenomenon, but scientific research has been unable to provide a convincing explanation of why these "fixed routes" exist, he said. Some experts believe that geographical conditions, wind speeds and air humidity play a key role, while others favor the theory that the earth's magnetic field plays a crucial, if little understood, role in guiding the birds to their winter quarters.

Unluckily for the birds passing through Hunan, their timeworn routes provide rich picking for the hunters. "Most of the birds killed are small and medium-sized," according to Li, who described the flocks as "bird rain". In the period just after sunset, countless numbers of birds fly above the mountain villages where "hundreds of well-prepared professional hunters wait, their lights fully illuminated to attract them. They use guns and homemade cannons loaded with grapeshot that can kill tens of birds in one go."

Once dead, the birds embark on one final journey - to the dinner table. Some of the hunters are so successful that they make their entire year's income during the short migratory season. Diners pay as much as 300 yuan ($48) to eat rare species such as swan in local restaurants. For rural families existing on an annual income of 1,000 yuan, the bird-hunting season is a big deal.

And while some of the birds are sold locally, others are loaded into refrigerated trucks and transported further afield, to places such as Guangdong province, where the locals traditionally have a taste for bird meat.

Qing Dynasty hunters

"Swan tastes fantastic, far more delicious than duck or goose. When I was a child, I ate swan for the first and last time. Unforgettable," said a 50-year-old cab driver in Changsha, who declined to be named. He said he was raised in a village in north Hunan, where bird hunting is a local tradition.

For most residents, the birds are just a delicious foodstuff rather than a rare species. Local amateur and professional hunters kill the birds for nutrition and profit, but wealthy out-of-towners often arrive with their guns, girlfriends and a case of beer to indulge in a little sport.

"In many areas of the country, bird hunting has been a tradition for hundreds of years, as far back as the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)," said Zhang Houyi, 71, who was born and raised in Yueyang, a city on the shores of Dongting Lake, China's second-largest freshwater body and a famous wintering ground for migratory birds.

"There was a special group of hunters who worked for the emperor during the Qing Dynasty. Migratory birds were only eaten by the royal family and their relatives at that time," he said. The city maintained the tradition of "officially recognized" teams of hunters until the late 1970s. Zhang was a team leader until 1979.

The weapon used at the time was similar to a modern-day mortar, consisting of a number of iron pipes, 3 or 4 meters in length, fixed on a hollow base which was filled with gunpowder. The tubes contained hundreds of small iron balls that could kill even the largest birds with ease.

As awareness of wildlife protection increases in China, traditions are gradually being replaced by regulations, said Qian Fawen, an avian expert at the Chinese Academy of Forestry.

Reports on the movements of various species within even a small geographic area cost tens of thousand of yuan. Meanwhile, detailed cross-continental observations cost millions, but Qian has only received funding of between 100,000 to 200,000 yuan.

"This is why we cannot make hunting legal, because we don't yet have specific knowledge about the number of species," he said.

Habitats under threat

Illegal hunting is just one of the activities threatening the birds as they migrate, said Jiang from the WWF. The destruction of the natural habitat poses an equally grave danger to those who survive the rigors of the journey, the guns and the nets.

The last national wetland investigation, undertaken in 2003, indicated that 1.3 million hectares of wetland were turned over to cultivation during the previous decade, resulting in the disappearance of roughly 1,000 lakes nationwide. Moreover, shrinking water resources and reclamation projects are also eating away at the wetland areas.

The wetlands of the lower Yangtze River provide a winter home for 800,000 to 1 million birds, including the Siberian white crane, which is listed as "critically endangered" by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.

Police forces play a crucial role in the protection of migratory birds. China's Wild Animal Protection Law enacted in 1988 says that anyone who catches, kills, sells, purchases, transports or carries wildlife without express official permission faces fines or prosecution.

The forestry police in Hunan are now screening for illegal activity across the province, while simultaneously stepping up enforcement and supervision of the relevant laws.

Recently, local county governments in Xinhua, Xinshao and Longhui in Hunan province have signed a convention on bird protection in an effort to restrain illegal hunting.

Meanwhile, a series of educational campaigns will urge the general public to pay more attention to the region's wildlife. However, research is still minimal: "Even as an expert on wild birds, I can't tell you the exact numbers or species of the birds migrating through Hunan province. It's embarrassing," admitted Qian.

Tang Yue contributed to this story.

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