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In the rugged, sun-drenched highlands of Pakistan’s Bajaur District, the air was once thick with the calls of migratory birds and the heavy scent of pine. Today, that air is eerily quiet. The mountains, once the domain of predators and the playground of vast herds, have become a theater of disappearance.
What was once a thriving ecosystem is now a landscape of ghosts, where the only thing more abundant than the rocky terrain are the memories of the elders who remember when the wild was truly wild.
The Echoes of Giants: Memories of the Elders
For eighty-five-year-old Malik Haroon Khan, the history of Bajaur is written in the tracks of animals that no longer exist. Standing in Dele village, he recalls a childhood where the line between civilization and the wild was razor-thin.
"Bears were so common in our village that we could not go into the fields alone," Malik recalls.
He speaks of a time when leopards prowled the shadows of the ravines, wolves howled through the nights, and the forests teemed with monkeys, jackals, and porcupines. These weren't just stories; they were a way of life. He tells of a child once injured in a bear attack, and a friend who stood face-to-face with a leopard in a valley—a standoff that ended only when the great cat turned and melted back into the brush.
Today, those predators are gone. The Snow Leopard, last seen in the Serisar forest in 1998, and the Black Bear have vanished from the local maps, leaving behind a void that no amount of modern development can fill.
A Twenty-Year Freefall: The Mechanics of Extinction
The decline has been swift and brutal. Over the last two decades, a "perfect storm" of human interference and environmental collapse has stripped Bajaur of its biodiversity. Experts point to three primary killers:
Illegal Hunting: The transition from traditional tracking to "electronic warfare"—using recorded bird calls and massive net strips—has decimated local populations.
Climate Stress: Pakistan ranks 7th among the most climate-vulnerable nations. Changing snowfall patterns and drying river systems have turned lush habitats into arid dust bowls.
Habitat Fragmentation: As the human population grows, the "deserts and deep ravines" Malik Haroon Khan once roamed have been sliced up by roads and settlements.
The Tragedy of the Quail and the Vulture
The scale of the loss is perhaps best measured by Abdul Rauf Khan, known locally as "Multan Baba." A hunter for fifty years, he remembers the "Quail Fairs" of Khar Tehsil where birds were once caught by the hundreds.
"Ten years ago, a hunter could catch 300 quails in a season," Rauf says. "Last year, I caught only two."
The disappearance extends to the skies as well. Seventy-five-year-old Muhammad Muzaffar Khan recounts an encounter from the 1970s with a Qajirbaz—the legendary large vulture of the Charmang Valley. He once tried to catch one by the legs, only to be dragged across a field by the powerful bird. Now, the skies are empty; the vultures have been completely wiped out by habitat loss and shifting environmental conditions.
The Cost of Silence: Ecology vs. Economy
Wildlife is more than just a collection of animals; it is a global economic engine. While nations like Kenya and Vietnam have turned wildlife conservation into multi-million dollar tourism industries, Bajaur’s natural assets are slipping away.
Muhammad Safdar, a wildlife expert, notes a staggering statistic: migratory birds arriving from Central Asia have plummeted from millions to a mere few thousand. When the birds stop coming, the forests stop regenerating, and the beauty that draws the world to a region dies with them.
Locally Extinct
Black Bear, Common Leopard, Wild Cat, Vultures
Endangered / Struggling
Fox, Jackal, Wild Rooster, Sable
Vanishing Migrants
Quail, Falcon, Chakor, Sisai
A Flicker of Hope: The Fight for the Future
Despite the grim outlook, the tide is beginning to turn—slowly. The Wildlife Department of Bajaur has begun forming community-based conservation committees in Mamond, Arang, and Salarzai.
There are small victories:
The Kaimur Rescue: Recently, local residents successfully rescued a gray deer near Kaimur Mountain, choosing protection over the hunt.
Protected Zones: Hunting is now strictly prohibited in specific breeding zones in the Barang and Salarzai valleys.
Education: Social organizers like Muhammad Tayyab are taking the message to schools, teaching the next generation that a forest without animals is just a collection of wood.
The Final Hour
The 2016 Arang Valley survey confirmed what the elders feared: the Markhor and Snow Wolf are gone. Zoologist Imdad Khan warns that for the remaining species—the foxes and the wild roosters—time is a luxury they don't have.
Bajaur stands at a crossroads. It can either become a silent monument to what was lost, or it can be the place where Pakistan proves that nature can be brought back from the brink. For Malik Haroon Khan and the children of Dele village, the hope is that the next leopard sighting won't be a memory, but a reality.

Ross is known as the Pambansang Blogger ng Pilipinas - An Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Professional by profession and a Social Media Evangelist by heart.
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