A Greater Adjutant Stork, rescued and rehabilitated by locals and conservationists, was today released in the wild here.
The stork, named 'Arshiya' by her rescuers, was released at Boragaon by the Assam State Zoo Divisional Forest Officer Chandan Bora at an initiative of 'Aaranyak', a conservation organisation, in cooperation with the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) and College of Veterinary Science, Khanapara.
"We are very proud to be a part of the bird's rehabilitation and Assam State Zoo team is committed for such endeavour in future," Bora said after releasing the bird.
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Boragaon is a popular feeding habitat of this stork.
The bird was earlier found in a marooned condition in Dadara village near Guwahati and was rescued by local villagers and a group of conservationists.
The doctors of the rescue team provided initial critical care to this bird and after its condition stabilised, it was admitted to Assam State Zoo.
The bird is a member of the globally endangered Greater Adjutant Stork family, distributed in Assam and Bihar in India and a few places in Cambodia, with its global population standing less than 1000.
The bird was named by the rescuers after a school student Arshiya Mahanta for her dedication towards conservation of wildlife.
Aaranyak's Purnima Devi Barman, who is spearheading a conservation programme for conservation of these storks, appealed to all fellow nature lovers and forest department to help reduce the threat faced by this bird.