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In stronghold of Guinea-Bissau, endangered vultures soar again

Traditional healers in Guinea-Bissau consider the critically endangered hooded vulture a prize ingredient capable of treating ailments ranging from stomachaches to epilepsy. 

“Vultures are powerful animals. They have loads of uses,” says Idrissa Biai, one of Guinea-Bissau’s most prominent traditional healers, reflecting the sentiment that has helped drive an illicit trade.

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Good news is often buried by the enormity of biodiversity loss. A population rise in Guinea-Bissau’s hooded vulture population shows that ground-up conservation efforts can work – if given a chance.

Guinea-Bissau is home to the world’s largest populations of hooded vultures, or Necrosyrtes monachus. But in recent years, a series of mass poisonings by poachers left thousands of birds “bubbling from their beaks” as they died. 

The plunging numbers weren’t just a loss for biodiversity. Researchers believe healthy vulture populations also stop the spread of diseases like anthrax and rabies.

Conservationists launched a public information campaign – and plan a new launch later this year. Already, slowly rising population numbers are a sign that beliefs are slowly reversing, too.

“Communities didn’t want to hand over information about killings … but that is beginning to change,” says Francisco Gomes Wambar, director of the Organização para Defesa e Desenvolvimento das Zonas Húmidas (Organization for the Defense and Development of Wetlands) nongovernmental organization.  

The successful campaign means hooded vulture populations are “beginning to stabilize,” says Hamilton Montero, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Biodiversity and Protected Areas. 

Their heads are boiled into soup, their claws crushed into powder, and their feathers plucked to provide protection from curses. Traditional healers in the small West African nation of Guinea-Bissau consider the critically endangered hooded vulture a prize ingredient capable of treating ailments ranging from stomachaches to epilepsy. 

“No other bird can fly so high. Vultures are powerful animals,” says Idrissa Biai, one of Guinea-Bissau’s most prominent traditional healers, who runs the national chapter of Prometra, a nongovernmental organization that promotes traditional medicine. 

“They have loads of uses. It really depends on the individual healer,” he says, reflecting the sentiment that has helped drive an illicit trade.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Good news is often buried by the enormity of biodiversity loss. A population rise in Guinea-Bissau’s hooded vulture population shows that ground-up conservation efforts can work – if given a chance.

Guinea-Bissau was long home to the world’s largest populations of hooded vultures, or Necrosyrtes monachus. Hard data is scarce as researchers lack the resources to carry out nationwide population surveys, but in 2018, it was estimated the country was home to some 43,000 hooded vultures. That’s almost a quarter of the last global estimate of 197,000 birds, although that survey was itself carried out more than a decade ago, in 2011. What’s certain is that any dip – or rise – in numbers in Guinea-Bissau has an outsize impact on the overall population.

And, beginning in 2019, a series of mass poisonings by poachers there left thousands of birds “bubbling from their beaks” as they died. Spurred largely by demand from traditional healers from as far afield as neighboring Senegal and Nigeria, a third of the population in Guinea-Bissau was wiped out. Across Africa, vultures also fall victim to so-called secondary poisoning when they eat poisoned meat left out by farmers trying to fend off predators like lions or wild dogs. Today, 6 out of 11 vulture species living on the continent are endangered. 

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