Nature & Travel

Cyprus: Around 435,000 birds slaughtered by illicit trappers this autumn: report

Photo: Ken Jack - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images.
Photo: Ken Jack - Corbis/Corbis/Getty Images.
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Trappers in Cyprus have killed hundreds of thousands of migratory birds this season to be served up as delicacies in restaurants, conservation groups said on Wednesday.

At least 435,000 birds, including warblers and blackcaps, were slaughtered by trappers in the autumn of 2023, BirdLife Cyprus, Britain’s Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), and the Committee Against Bird Slaughter (CABS) reported.

The toll is estimated at 90,000 higher than in the autumn of 2022. While figures have sharply declined from the more than two million killed annually until a decade ago, demand for the birds served pickled or fried in the traditional dish “ambelopoulia” has never waned.

“Illegal bird trapping has become a demand-driven wildlife crime, with the trading of trapped birds in lawbreaking restaurants being the key economic driver for organized trappers,” the conservation groups stated in a report.

The report noted a rise in activity in British sovereign bases on the east Mediterranean island, possibly due to a lack of law enforcement personnel.

Survey records show that at least 157 bird species have been found indiscriminately trapped, including kestrels, cuckoos, and owls. Ninety of the species are listed as conservation priority species under the EU Birds Directive, the report highlighted.

Criminal gangs either snare birds with mist nets or immobilize them on gluey lime-sticks, from which the birds must be ripped off by hand before being sold to restaurants.

The use of the lime-stick method has been on the rise after authorities lowered fines for transgressors, according to BirdLife Cyprus.
Source: Reuters
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