| RARE
BAY OWL RESCUED FROM BOKAKHAT, RELEASED SUBSEQUENTLY
KAZIRANGA,
January 31, 2003: A Bay Owl was rescued from
the Bokakhat Wildlife Division and brought to the Centre
for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation (CWRC)
here on Wednesday. It was released later the same night.
Eyewitnesses said they saw an uncommon bird being chased
by a crow in the morning. The bird tried to fly away,
but somehow dropped into a courtyard in a house on the
outskirts of the town. It was picked up by residents
who realised it was an owl. They promptly handed it
over to forest personnel at the Bokakhat Wildlife Division
office.
The
assistant conservator of forests, Mr LN Baruah, immediately
drove down to CWRC for treating the bird and rehabilitating
it. The owl was identified as a Bay Owl (Phodilus badius)
of which there seem to be no sighting records from the
area. The bird was examined and found to have no external
injury. It was housed in a hard paper box in a dark
room. Since the bird did not have any injuries, both
Mr Baruah and CWRC personnel decided to release the
bird after darkness set in.
According
to experts this is the first authentic record of a Bay
Owl sighting in recent years in Assam. Mr Mann Baura,
wellknown birdwatcher, said this was the first record
of a Bay Owl sighting in Kaziranga. He said the last
authentic record of this bird was from Namdapha National
Park a couple of years ago. According to Dr Anwaruddin
Choudhury, Bay Owls had been seen in recent times at
Pakke Wildlife Sanctuary of Arunachal Pradesh and there
have been some unconfirmed reports from adjacent Nameri
National Park on the Assam side. According to Salim
Ali and Dillon Ripley, the Bay Owl is a rare species
found in Sikkim, Manipur, Nagaland, and along the banks
of the Brahmaputra in Upper Assam. It is confined to
heavy evergreen forests in submontane tracts and foothills.
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