Songbirds are in crisis as trappers and smugglers force them into lucrative bird-singing competitions

Millions of songbirds in Southeast Asia are trapped and smuggled each year for keeping as pets or entering in competitions. Scientists warn that it's fueling a crisis.

An orange and brown bird has its beak open, singing a song
A wild robin is spotted singing in a nature reserve.
(Image credit: Chris McLoughlin via Getty Images)

On a Sunday afternoon in April, the main minibus terminal in Sukabumi, Indonesia, looked sleepy from the outside. But in an open space round the back, hundreds of men were gathered. Amid chatter and cigarette smoke, the air buzzed with excitement, for one of the region's biggest bird-singing competitions was set to begin, and a motorbike was among the prizes.

As the day progressed, dozens of songbirds were brought out for their 10-minute rounds, from tiny garden sunbirds and grey-cheeked bulbuls to larger oriental magpie-robins and orange-headed thrushes. Then the emcee announced the main event — the singing contest among the highly popular, strikingly handsome white-rumped shamas — and a hush fell over the crowd.

Sandy Ong
Science journalist

Sandy Ong is an independent science and tech journalist based in Singapore. She writes about the environment, emerging technologies, science, health and challenges faced by developing countries across Asia and beyond, with work appearing in The Atlantic, Wired UK, Newsweek, New Scientist, Undark, Science, Nature, IEEE Spectrum and Nikkei Asia. Her reporting has taken her from bear bile farms in Vietnam and polluted rivers in the Philippines to driverless cars in Singapore and schoolgirls making their own sanitary pads in Nepal.

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