Why Bharatpur's Keoladeo Wetland Is the Heartbeat of India's Painted Storks Nesting Colony
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 18, 2026, 07:50 IST
Why Bharatpur's Keoladeo Wetland Is the Heartbeat of India's Painted Storks Nesting Colony
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Every winter, thousands of painted storks descend on Bharatpur's Keoladeo wetland to breed, fish, and raise their young in one of Asia's most watched nesting colonies. The birds don't choose this place by accident. The shallow water, the fish cycles, and the protected acacia forest all lock together in a system that no other Rajasthan site has replicated.
What the Painted Stork Actually Is
The plumage is where the name earns itself. Adults carry a wash of deep pink across the wing coverts, a bare orange-yellow face, and a yellow bill that turns more vivid during breeding season. Juveniles are a dull brown-grey that bears no resemblance to the parent. A colony viewed from the Keoladeo watchtower in peak season, several thousand birds occupying the same acacia canopy, reads as a single living structure, not a gathering of individuals.
Why Bharatpur and Not Somewhere Else
The birds nest in the acacia trees that line the wetland's islands and margins. Below those trees, the water sits between 0.5 and 1.5 metres deep through the breeding season, which runs from roughly July to October, coinciding with the monsoon flush that pushes fish into the shallows. A deeper wetland would scatter the fish across a larger water column. A shallower one would dry out before the chicks fledge. Keoladeo's managed water levels hold that window open long enough for a full breeding cycle, which is why the colony returns here rather than dispersing to one of the many other Rajasthan water bodies.
The Nesting Colony and How It Functions
Both parents incubate the eggs and feed the chicks. Feeding trips are timed to the fish activity in the shallows: early morning and late afternoon, when water temperatures drop and fish move into the margins. A single chick requires several hundred grams of fish per day. With a typical clutch of three to four eggs, a pair of painted storks at Keoladeo is running a continuous supply operation across the wetland for the full duration of the chick-rearing period, which lasts about 60 days after hatching.
The Threats That Have Narrowed the Colony
Cattle grazing inside the park was another pressure. After Keoladeo's designation as a national park, grazing rights were formally removed, which triggered protests from the Ajan Bund-dependent villages but also allowed the acacia and wetland vegetation to recover. The trade-off has not been fully resolved. Migratory bird counts, including the painted stork census conducted periodically by the Bombay Natural History Society and the Wildlife Institute of India, continue to track the colony's fluctuation as a proxy for the wetland's health.
What the Stork Tells You About the Wetland
The Keoladeo wetland and the painted stork colony are not two separate things that happen to share a postcode. The birds shaped the acacia canopy through decades of nesting pressure and guano deposition, which enriched the soil and altered which species grow there. The trees hold the nests. The nests produce the guano. The guano feeds the fish. The fish feed the birds. Pull any one element and the loop breaks, which is why the water politics upstream of Bharatpur are not a background issue for the wildlife. They are the wildlife issue.