Drone photography raises concerns for Sri Lanka’s flamingo flock

UngulateNerd92

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  • The annual migration of a flock of thousands of greater flamingos to northern Sri Lanka’s Mannar wetland draws crowds of photographers, a growing number of whom now use drones to snap the birds from above.
  • Environmental activists and authorities have warned against this trend, saying the presence of drones disturbs the birds and could drive them away from Mannar altogether.
  • Experts point to a worrying precedent: In the 1990s, the Bundala wetland in the country’s south was pumped full of fresh water as part of an irrigation program, killing off the shrimp and plankton that flamingos there fed on. The flamingos soon abandoned the wetland.
  • In Mannar, a region impoverished by decades of civil war, the flamingos are a key tourism attraction that should be preserved to help boost the livelihoods of locals, experts say.
With reddish-pink, brushstroke-like smudges on its wings, legs and large downward-curved beak, the greater flamingo is a stunning bird to watch, particularly in flight as part of a large flock.

One such flock, numbering about 5,000 greater flamingos (Phoenicopterus roseus), stopped over at the Mannar wetland, a Ramsar site, in northern Sri Lanka this past January. The annual visitors drew large crowds, many of them armed with professional-grade cameras and lenses to match, and others toting smartphones while trying to get up close to the birds.

Then there were those, a small but growing group, that brought drones. Flying them right above the flamingo flock in search of picturesque aerial shots, they included both professional and hobbyist photographers. To environmentalists, however, this emerging trend could pose a serious threat to the flamingos in particular, and to wildlife in general.

https://news-mongabay-com.cdn.amppr...s-concerns-for-sri-lankas-flamingo-flock/amp/
 
They need a legislation that prohibits drone usage over protected nature reserves.

Unfortunately, I see frequently videos online that use drones to scare away flamingo flocks, so they can film them flying. Idiots.
 
They need a legislation that prohibits drone usage over protected nature reserves.

Unfortunately, I see frequently videos online that use drones to scare away flamingo flocks, so they can film them flying. Idiots.

I've seen drone footage used in nature documentaries and I have also seen usage of drones in making of's of nature documentaries, even for big productions. Are all these filmers being irresponsible, or is there actually an acceptable way to use drones in wildlife filming?
 
In several countries, there is a blank law prohibiting flying drones over national parks and reserves, to prevent scaring wild animals and destroying the quiet enjoyment of other visitors.
 

Ah thank you for letting me know. This is pretty serious... I have personally visited Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve in Huntington Beach, Orange County, California to see their colony of nesting
California least terns (Sterna antillarum browni). My paternal granparents used to live close to Bolsa Chica and my dad grew up in that area. Besides Southern California's Least terns and Sri Lanka's Greater flamingos, I wouldn't be surprised if similar incidents with other bird taxa occured.
 
In several countries, there is a blank law prohibiting flying drones over national parks and reserves, to prevent scaring wild animals and destroying the quiet enjoyment of other visitors.

Very good. Can you reference specific laws for us?
 
Very good. Can you reference specific laws for us?
Czech republic. Since several years, there is prohibition to use drones over national parks (NP) and protected areas (CHKO), and several other types of places. People with really good reason can ask for an written extemption, but if allowed, they also get rules exactly when and where and how high they can use it, with breeding birds in mind.
 
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