General overview
The bustard family consists of 26 species of landbirds, distributed across the eastern hemisphere. These birds include some of the heaviest animals capable of flight, and are famed for their elaborate breeding displays.
Bustards perform important ecological services in the form of insect pest control. They are sensitive to human disturbance and cannot thrive in landscapes that are managed unsustainably. In this way, bustards serve as indicators of responsible landscape management.
Bustards are now the most highly imperiled group of terrestrial birds, with 60% evaluated as threatened or near threatened with extinction. The threats facing bustards include unsustainable hunting and poaching, agricultural intensification, habitat degradation, poisoning with agricultural chemicals, and collisions with powerlines, among others.
BWB aims to unite stakeholders to address these diverse threats through coordinated action.
Take a look at some of the most endangered bustard species. We highlight the urgent need to accelerate targeted conservation efforts to prevent their functional extinction within a few decades.
The Bengal florican
(Houbaropsis bengalensis)
Great Indian Bustard
(Ardeotis nigriceps)
Great Bustard
(Otis tarda)