Return of the king? Pakistan moves to bring gharials from Nepal to its rivers

UngulateNerd92

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  • Pakistani officials have requested the transfer of hundreds of gharial crocodiles from Nepal in an effort to reintroduce a species last seen in Pakistan in 1985.
  • Wildlife conservation officials in Nepal have confirmed communications on the issue, but say a decision hasn’t been made yet.
  • A key obstacle to any future transfer is the concern that Pakistan may not have done enough to change the conditions that led to the gharial’s local extinction there.
  • The slender-snouted crocodile once ranged west from Pakistan to Bangladesh in the east, but is now almost entirely restricted to India and Nepal, both of which run captive-breeding programs to boost the species’ population.
Pakistan is aiming for the return of an apex predator not seen in the country in nearly four decades: the gharial crocodile (Gavialis gangeticus).

According to the WWF program in Pakistan, the government there has asked Nepal, which has a long-running program raising the critically endangered reptiles in captivity, to provide hundreds of juvenile gharials for a planned reintroduction program.

Gharials, a fish-eating species with a distinctive slender snout, were once found in the Indus River in Pakistan and the Brahmaputra that runs through China, India and Bangladesh. Today, the species is virtually extinct from countries other than Nepal and India, where it occurs in the Ganges River and its tributaries.

“The last time gharials were recorded in Pakistan was around 1985 in the Nara Canal,” a channel of the Indus, said Rab Nawaz, senior director of biodiversity at WWF-Pakistan. “Some reports were received from the same area after 2000, but despite surveys by WWF and the local wildlife department, there was no success in locating the species.”

While local support for gharial reintroduction is said to be high, Pakistan’s request to Nepal faces multiple obstacles, including funding shortages and concerns from Nepal that Pakistan may not have done enough to change the conditions that led to the gharial’s local extinction there.

https://news-mongabay-com.cdn.amppr...-bring-gharials-from-nepal-to-its-rivers/amp/
 

I hope it works out, hopefully the conditions in Pakistan are suitable for Gharial reintroduction. Hopefully the conditions that lead them to become locally extinct in Pakistan are no longer an issue. Let's not declare premature victory, but let's wish this reintroduction project the best of luck and best of success.
 
Hopefully the conditions that lead them to become locally extinct in Pakistan are no longer an issue
Hunting/poaching shouldn't be as big of an issue anymore, since the only suitable areas for possible reintroduction are man-made lakes and the East Nara canal, a bigger problem might be competition from the already present mugger crocodiles, the only sizeable populations of which are also found in these sites

Let's not declare premature victory
Not a good track record for Pakistan when it comes to reintroduction. Blackbuck reintroduction, which started all the way back in the 50's has only produced captive animals. The overly enthusiastic rhinoceros reintroduction resulted in 3 miscarriages and the eventual deaths of both animals in a zoo enclosure. Cheer pheasant reintroduction also failed.

In the 80's there was an attempt at a captive breeding program with gharials acquired from India but it never resulted in any breeding and the last gharial died in the Lahore zoo in 2013.
 
Hunting/poaching shouldn't be as big of an issue anymore, since the only suitable areas for possible reintroduction are man-made lakes and the East Nara canal, a bigger problem might be competition from the already present mugger crocodiles, the only sizeable populations of which are also found in these sites


Not a good track record for Pakistan when it comes to reintroduction. Blackbuck reintroduction, which started all the way back in the 50's has only produced captive animals. The overly enthusiastic rhinoceros reintroduction resulted in 3 miscarriages and the eventual deaths of both animals in a zoo enclosure. Cheer pheasant reintroduction also failed.

In the 80's there was an attempt at a captive breeding program with gharials acquired from India but it never resulted in any breeding and the last gharial died in the Lahore zoo in 2013.

Very interesting. Thank you for this information. I was actually wondering about and thinking about Indian rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis) reintroduction in Pakistan and the plausibility of it. Same with Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) reintroduction.
 
Very interesting. Thank you for this information. I was actually wondering about and thinking about Indian rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis) reintroduction in Pakistan and the plausibility of it. Same with Blackbuck (Antilope cervicapra) reintroduction.
I'd get into detail about those but it'll take the thread off topic
 
An update to this, today a young gharial was caught from the Sutlej river in Pakistan in a fishing net and later released, although still with a bit of net attached. India has a reintroduction project in the Beas river, which flows into the Sutlej so it was only a matter of time before one reached Pakistan.
 
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