Falconry Today
Human development affects
wildlife through intensified farming and forestry, construction, pollution,
disturbance and climate change. Some wildlife can be protected for the
future in reserves. However, there is little pristine land left to reserve
in most developed countries, and very few reserves large enough to hold
viable raptor populations. Most raptors and other wildlife must therefore
share areas that are already changed by humans.
To preserve diverse wild systems in these areas requires knowledge, skills
and resources for management. Falconers have already contributed very
widely to knowledge of wild raptor ecology and management. Modern
falconers continue a tradition of research that extends from Frederich of
Hohenstauffen, through fundamental studies last century by the Craigheads,
Hamerstroms and Heinz Brüll, to many recent publications by falconer-ecologists.
No less important is the veterinary knowledge that falconers have
accumulated over the centuries. The many publications by falconer-vets
provide the basis for treatment and rehabilitation of many
injured wild raptors each year, often in centres run by falconers.
Falconers become raptor psychologists. This gave modern falconers the
skills to develop raptor breeding in enclosures.
When organochlorine
pesticides wiped out peregrinefalcons in large areas and threatened total
extinction, falconer-biologists Tom Cade in the USA and Christian Saar in
Europe were inspired by earlier falconer-breeders Heinz Meng and Renz
Waller to build large breeding and restoration programs. These programs
provided a knowledge-base for other peregrine projects in Sweden and
Canada, and for crucial programs to rescue other species. The techniques
developed by falconers to release raptors are also important skills for
restoring lost population.
Trained raptors were used
in studies to design electricity transmission lines with little risk of
electrocuting wildlife . Falconers used released raptors to encourage
nesting on human structures , to gain an understanding of predation that
can be needed to preserve rare species in managed landscapes and to
develop radio-tracking techniques that are so important for studies of
wild raptors.
Falconers founded
internationally active organisations specifically to distribute the
knowledge and skills they developed, including the Peregrine Fund and
Raptor Research Foundation . Of course, knowledge can be preserved in
writing and pictures, but practical skills are best preserved live.
Falconry provides a self-funding resource for preserving and developing
raptor handling skills, with training centres and apprenticeship schemes
to ensure that novices meet the welfare needs of tame raptors. Falconry
also provides the resources to maintain domestic breeding populations of
rare raptors. These domestic stocks are an insurance against the
extinction that might come to wild populations from unanticipated
pollutants or disease.
Another potentially great
value of falconry is as a
resource for preserving wildlife through the
World Conservation Union's concept of sustainable use. Healthy wild raptor
populations can sustain high yields of young birds, especially within the
traditional practise of borrowing for falconry and then returning them to
the wild. This relationship with wild raptors proved sustainable for
centuries in some parts of the world. Although domestic breeding can
remove a need for wild raptors, new methods of DNA-fingerprinting and
electronic tagging are now available to control harvests whose value can
motivate preservation of wildlife habitats. Falconry is also a potential
resource for conservation through sustainable use of prey species.
Falconry represents a natural method of predation, with a lower rate of
take than shooting and negligible risk of prey escaping injured.
Falconry already provides
an incentive for preserving some areas that hold too few game for other
sustainable uses of wildlife to be economic. Modern falconry has developed
many benefits for wildlife management and remains a unique resource for
conservation. We believe that preserving falconry is important for
conserving birds of prey.
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