| Turkey’s First Vulture Restaurant Opened in Green Zone City Forest of Iğdır |
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At the time of the inauguration, Dr. Çağan Şekercioğlu, KuzeyDoğa Society President and senior research biologist at Stanford University, highlighted the following facts: “This area that accommodates the highest number of Turkey’s 4 vulture species (Egyptian, bearded, griffon and black vultures) around the valleys of Aras and Arpaçay is the best suitable spot, for the first time in Turkey, to set up the vulture restaurants that have been operative in many countries such as South Africa and Mexico for years. A secret hide will be planted for the tourists that will be visiting the area to gaze at and photograph the vultures and other predators to be attracted by the carcasses left. We see here in Iğdır some similarities to the documentaries filmed in Africa. Nature tours from Turkey to the Bulgarian vulture restaurant are organized and these events provide them with foreign currency. However, Eastern Anatolia embraces greater number of vultures and it is possible that nature tourism make an important source of income for Eastern Anatolia. We have been continuously keeping the records of Turkey’s four vulture species around this region during our observations. It is necessary in Iğdır to establish a Vulture Restaurant, to gather the corpses of animals found car- crashed and death on the roads (like horses, donkeys, dogs, boars etc.), to deposit on the area, and to introduce this area to wildlife photographers. This is at the same time the first vulture restaurant with the view of the Mt. Ağrı (Ararat) in the world. KuzeyDoğa Society conducted pilot works regarding this subject in the previous years. We have documented the carcasses that we had left on the bank of the Aras River, Tekealtı Mountain and Tuzluca Dumpsite were gleaned by dozens of all kinds of vultures. Iğdır is a very ideal spot for the first vulture restaurant. Such an initiative will make our city an important nature tourism center and the agenda of the foreigners, will promote the economy, and will demonstrate Turkey’s nature conservation sensibility regarding nourishment of the vultures that are about to be extinct. Area within Iğdır Green Zone Taner Tazegün, Iğdır Environment and Forest City Director, and I ascertained for the project is fairly suitable for the vultures. We hope that the vultures will get used to the habitat in a short time. Later on, making use of a bird-watching shed that will be erected in Green Zone City Forest; all nature lovers, primarily people of Iğdır, will be able to observe the vultures closely in this area. Vultures make up the ultimate link of the chain of birds’ ecological function. They prevent scattering of saprophytic bacteria and microorganisms to the ambiance, by consuming the living things that have deceased and in progress of decomposition. Vultures can make 400-500 kilometers of distance in search of carcasses and, while doing this; they generally glide making use of hot airflows and not consuming much energy. Another reason for the vulture to go in such long distances is that they have a wingspan of almost 3 meters. The most eye-catching answering example of the question, “What would happen if vultures are not extant?” can be obtained from India. Diclofenac, a painkiller used in the treatment of cattle in India, caused the collapse of the vultures’ kidneys that had fed themselves with such cattle’s carcasses, which ultimately gave a birth to the 95 % or 99 % dwindling of the most pandemic vulture species. In consequence of the decline in the number of vultures, carcasses of the cattle were here and there getting rotten, and the number of the stray dogs that fed with them increased by 20 in various areas. Majority of the fatalities due to rabies appears in India. It has been measured that the extinction of the vultures caused 50,000 superfluous deaths of rabies until 2006 in India. In addition, extinction of vultures has inflicted a spiritual crisis to the Persian Zarathustra sectarians who abandon the deceased body of their relatives or kinsmen for the vultures. Presently, there are vulture restaurants in India for the sake of providing these predators with the required nourishment. They aim at increasing the number of vultures in this fashion. Even though most imperative motive to create vulture restaurants is to sustain the vulture race, birdwatchers, nature photographers and nature lovers who may stopover at these restaurants will add value to the area on economic grounds via nature tourism. Such that some countries like Bulgaria, Mexico, South Africa, Nepal and Spain supply incomes from these activities and make them into an industry.“ |