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Satellite-tagged Amur falcons head to Far East through India after winter migration to Africa

A tagged young female Amur falcon named 'Alang' is currently headed for India's west coast and is crossing the Arabian Sea, having started from Somalia on Friday morning

Amur Falcon X/@byadavbjp

PTI
Published 16.05.26, 06:09 PM

Two of the three Amur falcons, which were satellite-tagged in Manipur's Tamenglong district in November 2025, are returning to their breeding grounds in the Far East through India, after migrating to the warmer southern Africa region during the winter.

In a post on X on Saturday, Union Environment Minister Bhupendra Yadav said, "Having completed more than four months in their non-breeding grounds in Southern Africa, two of these Amur Falcons are on their spring migration, returning to their breeding region in Far-East Asia via India." Yadav said during their journey from Africa's Somalia to northeast India, they undertake a non-stop flight of nearly 6,000 km in six days.

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A tagged young female Amur falcon named 'Alang' is currently headed for India's west coast and is crossing the Arabian Sea, having started from Somalia on Friday morning, according to the minister.

With favourable tailwind, the sea-crossing will be three-day nonstop flight, he said.

With funding from the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), the satellite tracking project has been a successful community-led conservation effort in India, Yadav added.

The project has helped provide insights into Amur falcons, which will enable their management and conservation.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

Amur Falcons Migration
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