Keoladeo Ghana Bird, Sanctuary,
Bharatpur, Rajasthan is one of the most spectacular water-bird
sanctuaries in the world and offers a magnificent display of indigenous
breeding birds and winter migrants.
The sub-tropical climate in the
sanctuary together with its extensive aquatic vegetation and profusion
of trees provide ideal conditions for nesting. Soon after the south-west
Monsoon, Indian water- birds like cormorants, darters (snake- birds),
spoonbills, white ibises egrets, the grey heron, the painted stork, the
open- billed stork begin to nest usually in congested, mixed colonies,
on trees partly submerged in water. The nesting colonies are mainly
sited in the hundreds of acacia (babul) trees that, dot the marsh.
By the time the north-east monsoon
and the winter arrive, these birds have raised several broods and
generally reached the end of their strenuous breeding enterprise.
They are now free to fly over to feeding grounds close by or far away.
In winter, migratory birds arrive
from regions as distant as Russia (Siberia) and northern Europe by
November. The magnificent Siberian crane and a variety of duck, geese,
sandpipers, plovers and others descend in vast numbers on the large,
shallow sheets of water in Ghana and spend a few months around feeding
grounds, wintering with us. They return to their homes in the cold north
by the end of February.
Some indigenous water-birds that have
completed their breeding enterprise elsewhere in India also migrate to
the Ghana Sanctuary. For instance, among the three kinds of pelicans
found in the sanctuary in December, the rosy and the Dalmatian pelicans
are migrants from outside the country, but the third, the grey pelican,
breeds in India itself. The indigenous birds commence their nesting
enterprise by mid- September and depart by about March.
In view of the wide range and the
large number of water-birds found in the Ghana Bird Sanctuary, the
well-known National Audubon Society of U.S.A. has chosen this Sanctuary
to hold its Ecology Work shop from February 9 to 11, 1976.
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