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Ras Al Khor Sanctuary is one of them. In the s, the unfenced, barren and mostly dry area was a desolate tract where less than greater flamingos stopped before continuing their migration. In pictures: Ras Al Khor wilelife Sanctuary. The site's beginnings have the mallard duck to thank, after 3, were imported in to breathe life into the mudflat. They were homed at the tail-end of the tidal creek — what is now the body of the sanctuary — recalls Kevin Hyland, ecologist at the Wildlife Protection Office who arrived in the UAE in That was how the first focus on the flamingos emerged," he said.
Almost completely sunk in mud stand vertical structures that blend into the environment, seemingly not burdening the 2, greater flamingos that were recorded in — a record number for the site. The first is the natural end of the creek. The second is closed off from the Arabian Gulf and has treated sewage water from the Al Awir treatment plant pumped in. Recent figures were unavailable but in , around , cubic metres of treated water were put in the manmade side of the wetland every day. Efforts to make the birds at home have included building nests and planting mangroves.
In however the first mangrove seedlings didn't take root. The following year, military earth movers were brought in to level the ground which removed the nutrient-rich topsoil, but was instrumental in deciding that proper protection should be given to the area, said Hyland.
Some ideas were successful and others failed, such as an island built in the creek to attract birds — unfortunately is disappeared at high-tide. The low lying mudflats are important for ground-nesting birds and one man, Colin Richardson, almost put the spotlight on this place single-handedly," he said of one of the UAE's first bird recorders.