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SafariNow
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Articles: Birds 'starve' at S Korea wetland
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Posted by Admin on Sunday, May 13, 2007 - 03:28 PM
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Travel, TourismTens of thousands of migratory birds are facing starvation in South Korea, the UK-based Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) says.
A dead spoonbilled sandpiper o­n the dried-out Saemangeum wetlands (Image: Nial Moores)
Fewer than 1,000 spoonbilled sandpipers remain in the wild

The group says a land reclamation project has destroyed key wetlands used by the birds o­n their way from Asia to their breeding grounds in the Arctic.

Without the food at the Saemangeum wetlands, o­n the east coast, many of the birds will not survive the journey.

Two endangered species of wading bird face extinction because of the changes.

There are believed to be fewer than 1,000 mature spoonbilled sandpipers and Nordmann's greenshanks left in the wild.

The RSPB and other wildlife and conservation groups are highlighting the environmental problems at Saemangeum to mark World Migratory Birds Day.

'Motorway service station'

Saemangeum was o­nce an estuarine tidal flat o­n South Korea's Yellow Sea coast.

Bar-tailed godwits, eastern curlews, dunlins and great knots fly over the estuary before the sea wall was completed (Image: Jvande Kam)
What we've lost here is o­ne of the jewels in the crown of wetland habitats
Sarah Dawkins, RSPB

It was an important feeding ground for about 400,000 migrating birds making their way o­n a 24,000km round-trip between Asia and Alaska and Russia.

But 15 years ago, the government revealed plans for the world's biggest land reclamation project in order to drain the estuary and create fertile paddy fields.

After a succession of legal challenges from conservationists, the 33km sea wall was finally closed a year ago.

Since then, according to the RSPB, the vast wetlands have been replaced by parched earth, shellfish beds and plants have been destroyed, and thousands of birds are starving as a result.

"What we've lost here is o­ne of the jewels in the crown of wetland habitats," Sarah Dawkins, who is monitoring the impact of the sea wall o­n birds, told the BBC.

"The Yellow Sea is an amazingly important stopover point for birds travelling up from places like New Zealand and Australia to their breeding grounds in the Arctic."

"And Saemangeum was o­ne of the most important areas in the Yellow Sea."

Ms Dawkins said the birds relied o­n the tidal flats at Saemangeum as somewhere where they could land and "refuel" after a nine-day flight from New Zealand.

Map showing Saemangeum

"It's a bit like losing a motorway service station and then your car running out of petrol," she explained.

Despite the damage, Ms Dawkins said there was still hope for the wetlands if the two sluice gates built into the sea wall were opened.

"That would restore a few thousand hectares of estuary system within Saemangeum and that would be at least something to help the birds," she said.

"The birds are still here. They're still coming."

"I think we really do need to still try to save some of their habitat."

Ms Dawkins also said it was critically important to mount a global effort to safeguard other estuaries around Saemangeum, o­ne of which the government is planning to reclaim.
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