Measures to Increase Wild Bird Populations in Urban Areas in Java
Abstract
in which birds become pests are, in particular, found where monocultures, such as cereal crops offer birds an abundance of food and the opportunity to increase out of proportion. One goal of wildlife management is to control these numbers, i.e. keeping down to a harmless low level rather than eradicating, which however tends to happen with the large scale use of pesticide2 (Kalshoven, 1981). The other goal of management
is to keep bird numbers well above the dangerously low population levels with high extinction probability. In the urban environment, problems concerning the first aspect of
management are rare, as most town dwelling bird species are commensals rather than parasites. In some towns of SE Asia the House Crow (Corvus splendens, gagak) can become a nuisance, as do Feral Pigeons (Columba livia, merpati) in many large European cities. In contrast, scavengers such as the Brahminy Kite (Haliastur indus, elang bondol) and the Jungle Crow (Corns macrorhynchos, gaok), formerly common in the towns of Jakarta and Semarang, where tbel used to be abundant near slaughter houses (Hoogerwerf & Siccama, 1937 - 1938), hiGe largely disappeared and are hardly found anymore
in Java. This may partly be caused by drastically decreased food supplies along with improved sanitation, which already resulted in the decrease of scavenging raptors in other parts of the world (Newton, 1979). The decrease of Java Sparrows (Pad& oryzivoru, gelatik) in Singapore was said to be caused by changed local conditions, in which the supply of spced grain, food intended for poultry, etc. (on which the sparrows were
largely depend on) no longer exists (Ward, 1968); in Java the modem rice mills made rice-hulling more effective and less ,wasteful, which could have had its effect on the Javan population of the'species, which is known to have decreased dramatically during recent years (Van Helvoort, 198 1 ; Van Balen, 1984).
Full text article
Authors
Media Konservasi is an open access journal, meaning that all content is freely available without charge to the user or their institution. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles in this journal without needing to request prior permission from the publisher or the author.
All articles published by Media Konservasi are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. This allows for unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided proper credit is given to the original authors.
Authors submitting manuscripts should understand and agree that the copyright of published manuscripts is retained by the authors. Copyright encompasses the exclusive rights of authors to reproduce, distribute, and sell any part of the journal articles in all forms and media. Reproduction of any part of this journal, its storage in databases, and its transmission by any form or media is allowed without written permission from Media Konservasi.