Kazakhstan releases endangered saker falcons in Saudi-backed restoration drive

Kazakhstan releases endangered saker falcons in Saudi-backed restoration drive

ALTYN-EMEL NATIONAL PARK, Kazakhstan, April 3 (Reuters) - With a loud thwack of their wings, the falcons took flight, quickly ‌soaring high above the rocky desert landscape of Altyn-Emel National ‌Park in southeastern Kazakhstan.

Reuters A saker falcon flies during its release into the wild as part of a population restoration programme led by Saudi Arabia's state-run Saudi Falcons Club in cooperation with Kazakh partners, at Altyn-Emel National Park in the Almaty Region, Kazakhstan March 29, 2026. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev A member of Saudi Arabia's state-run Saudi Falcons Club holds saker falcons before their release into the wild as part of a population restoration programme in cooperation with Kazakh partners, at Altyn-Emel National Park in the Almaty Region, Kazakhstan March 29, 2026. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev Specialists attach a GPS tracker to a saker falcon before its release into the wild as part of a population restoration programme led by Saudi Arabia's state-run Saudi Falcons Club in cooperation with Kazakh partners, at Altyn-Emel National Park in the Almaty Region, Kazakhstan March 29, 2026. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev Saker falcons sit with their eyes covered before being released into the wild as part of a population restoration programme led by Saudi Arabia's state-run Saudi Falcons Club in cooperation with Kazakh partners, at Altyn-Emel National Park in the Almaty Region, Kazakhstan March 28, 2026. REUTERS/Pavel Mikheyev

Kazakhstan releases endangered saker falcons in Saudi-backed restoration drive

The 34 birds were on an important mission: to help restore ​Kazakhstan's population of saker falcons, which for centuries have symbolised nobility and freedom for the nomadic peoples of the Kazakh steppe, as well as serving as faithful hunting companions.

Saudi Arabia's state-run Saudi Falcons Club is ‌leading a saker falcon ⁠restoration programme in partnership with a Kazakh institute in an effort to boost the population of this ⁠endangered "Red List" species. The group will release 35 to 45 birds annually over the next three years.

A migratory bird with a wingspan of 97–126 ​cm (38–50 inches), ​the saker falcon ranges across ​a vast area from central ‌Europe to northeastern China. In Kazakhstan, its population has declined by as much as 90% in recent years, largely due to habitat loss, researchers say..

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Kazakhstan's natural environment makes it one of the most important nesting areas for falcons, and therefore an ideal location for releasing ‌groups of birds – known as casts – ​back into the wild, according to Ahmed ​Fahd Al-Hababi, executive vice president ​of the Saudi Falcons Club.

"We are returning the ‌falcons to their natural habitat so ​they can breed ​and thrive in the wild," he said.

All the released birds will be fitted with GPS trackers and microchips, allowing scientists ​to collect data on ‌their migration patterns and other behaviours.

(Reporting by Pavel Mikheev; Additional ​reporting by Mariya Gordeyeva; Writing by Lucy Papachristou; editing ​by Guy Faulconbridge and Ros Russell)

 

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