I am glad of that but they still are in a precarious situation. I understand that researchers have been collecting eggs found in the wild and hatched them in incubation centres (42 eggs since 2019 of which 30 birds hatched from these wild-laid eggs). In the wild, fewer than 150 survive mostly in India’s Rajasthan state so why have so many eggs been collected rather than individuals?
Luckily, some of the founder birds have bred in captivity since March 2023 and laid eggs, which were also “artificially bred” (in other words, the fertilised egg was incubated artificially by humans, rather than naturally by the mother). 20 additional chicks have been born this way, 7 in 2025. Despite this, there are only around 50 captive-raised birds. Another problem is that, because the birds born in these breeding centres have imprinted on human researchers, they have apparently lost about 60-70% of their ability to survive in the wild.
I do hope that this incredible bird species survives, but I think more attention is needed if we are to preserve this unique bird.
Captive-raised chicks offer hope for extremely rare great Indian bustard.
Rajasthan centre racing to save Great Indian Bustard clocks big win(g)—1st captive-born chick of 2025