Dubai, 22 April 2007: A large nesting colony of Bank Myna, a variety of the common Myna or Pied Starling, has been spotted off Warsan in Dubai. This is arguably the largest breeding ground for this bird in the UAE, though it is commonly seen in Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah and other parts of the country.
According to Dr. Reza Khan, Head of Dubai Zoo, the bird with the zoological name, Acridotheres ginginianus, is a resident bird of the Indian Subcontinent, commonly seen from the Sindh Province in Pakistan to Bangladesh.
He said the nests were spotted in a desert area, off the Dubai Municipality-run Sewage Treatment Plant in Warsan.
"Prior to 1990, there was hardly any Bank Myna visible in any part of the UAE barring a few farming areas in Ras Al Khaimah. This bird was introduced to the UAE's environment from some specimens that flew free from pet shops and pet bird owners in the late 1980s and early 1990s when visitors returning from India used bring cage full of exotic birds form the subcontinent. In those days Sharjah Pet bird Shops were full of such birds and other mynas and starlings. First, the escaped Bank Myna established a population in the RAK. Later, it moved on to occupy areas in Dhaid, Sharjah, Dubai and Al Ain," Dr. Khan recollected.
He said he noticed the first breeding of the Bank Myna in a residential building near Al Wasl in Dubai in late 1990s. But the recently-found nests in Warsan are far bigger and they house a large number of birds.
"There are more than 100 nesting holes on the 3 steep banks of the pit as its eastern side is the sloping one through which trucks removed sand earlier. When I spotted the area it was late morning - and the temperature must have crossed 35 degrees centigrade. Hundreds of mynas were visiting the nesting holes - 50 to 100 cm deep horizontal tunnels- dug by the mynas themselves. Many were carrying food in their bill. This suggested that the colony is full with chicks," said Dr. Khan.
Bank Myna has nearly the same size of the common Myna or Pied Starling, which is approximately 25 cm. It is an omnivore eating almost anything that is edible including fruits of figs, banyan, sidr, ber or jujube, dates, Manila Tamarind or Inga dulcis, Miswak or Salvadora persica, and insects, worms, lizards and baby birds. Its name Bank Myna comes from the bird's habit of building nests on steep earth banks of rivers, canals, dams, and masonry works in old buildings and bridges. It usually lives and breeds in colonies. A large population of the Bank Myna lives in the area between the American University of Sharjah and the Cantonment in Sharjah, and Al Ain City.
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For more information, please contact Dr. Reza Khan on +971 50 6563601)
© Press Release 2007



















