Saudi Falcons Club Releases Endangered Falcons in Kazakhstan for Conservation

 The Saudi Falcons Club continues its international falcon release program through the 2026 Hadad initiative in Kazakhstan, part of a comprehensive scientific effort to reintroduce falcons into their natural habitats and support their stability along global migration routes.
 The selection of Altyn-Emel National Park as the release site is based on precise environmental and scientific criteria, including suitable natural habitats, expansive open areas, abundant prey, and its strategic location along one of the world’s key falcon migration routes. These factors make the park an ideal environment to support adaptation, stability, and breeding following release.
 This initiative represents an extension of the Kingdom’s efforts to preserve endangered falcons and support wildlife conservation programs. The Hadad program focuses on releasing Saker and Peregrine falcons into natural habitats outside the Kingdom, following a scientific methodology that entails rehabilitation, careful selection of release sites, and continuous monitoring and tracking to assess adaptation and reproduction.
 The program also includes the release of Mountain Peregrine and Lanner falcons within the Kingdom, reinforcing national efforts to protect biodiversity and sustain falcon populations.

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