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Kazakhstan releases endangered saker falcons in Saudi-backed restoration drive

By Thomson Reuters Apr 3, 2026 | 8:27 AM

ALTYN-EMEL NATIONAL PARK, Kazakhstan, April 3 (Reuters) – With a loud thwack of their wings, the falcons took flight, quickly soaring high above the rocky ​desert landscape of Altyn-Emel National Park in southeastern ‌Kazakhstan.

The 34 birds were on an important mission: to help restore Kazakhstan’s population of saker falcons, which for centuries have symbolised nobility and freedom for the nomadic peoples of the Kazakh steppe, ‌as ​well as serving as faithful hunting ⁠companions.

Saudi Arabia’s state-run Saudi ⁠Falcons Club is leading a saker falcon restoration programme in partnership with a Kazakh institute in an effort to boost the population of this endangered “Red List” ​species. The group will release 35 to 45 birds annually over the next three years.

A migratory bird with ⁠a wingspan of 97–126 cm (38–50 ⁠inches), the saker falcon ranges across a ​vast area from central Europe to northeastern China. In Kazakhstan, ​its population has declined by as much as ‌90% in recent years, largely due to habitat loss, researchers say..

Kazakhstan’s natural environment makes it one of the most important nesting areas for falcons, and therefore an ideal ⁠location for releasing groups of birds – known as casts – back into the wild, according to Ahmed Fahd Al-Hababi, executive vice ⁠president of the ‌Saudi Falcons Club.

“We are returning the ⁠falcons to their natural habitat so they ​can ‌breed and thrive in the wild,” he ​said.

All the ⁠released birds will be fitted with GPS trackers and microchips, allowing scientists to collect data on their migration patterns and other behaviours.

(Reporting by Pavel Mikheev; Additional reporting by Mariya Gordeyeva; Writing by Lucy Papachristou; editing by Guy Faulconbridge ​and Ros Russell)