Need for management of artificial sounds and bird droppings
By ANDY CHUA 
andychua@thestar.com.my
THE Sarawak Birdnest Supplier Association (SBSA) hopes  that the Sibu Municipal Council (SMC) will act on new swiftlet farms  operating in shophouses and residential properties.
Its vice-chairman Jesse Pang said that SBSA would welcome such action as the new farms were becoming a nuisance to the public.
“The  council should stop people from operating new farm houses. Action  should be taken against new farm operators and not the old ones,” he  told StarMetro yesterday.
There were about 100 swiftlet farmers in Sibu in 2008 but the number has since sky-rocketed.
SMC  chairman Datuk Tiong Thai King said on Monday that the council had  received numerous complaints of noise pollution and bird droppings at  the swiftlet farms and action would be taken under the Public Health  Ordinance.
“Only new farm operators use loud music to attract the  birds while the old operators do not need it as the birds are already  dwelling in the farm houses. However, the council can act against any  offenders,” he said.
On the issue of bird droppings, Pang said that most people had a wrong perception about it.
“It is important for the public and the council to understand that there are three types of birds involved,” he said.
The  species were the white-bellied collocia which rests on buildings all  day; the layang-layang which flies into towns from 6.30pm to 7.30pm and  perches on trees, building ledges and electrical cables; and the white  nest-house swiftlets.
The nests of the first two types had no  commercial value, Pang said. They, however, caused endless problems with  their droppings.
He said it was the nest-house swiftlets that people farmed.
“Most  people have the wrong perception that the nest-house swiftlets are the  culprits. This type is well-mannered and does not defecate anywhere  except in the birdhouse.
“As the birdhouse is in one’s property  all day, the operator is the one who does the cleaning, should there be  bird droppings on the floor. Moreover the population of nest-house  swiftlets is very low; less than 5% compared to the first two,” he said.
Pang,  however, felt that acting against swiftlet farmers could affect the  industry as it was lucrative, and the population of nest-house swiftlets  should be allowed to grow.
He said the nest-house swiftlets could reduce the population of the other types of swiftlets.
Instead  of acting against swiftlet farmers, it would be better to regulate the  industry by instituting proper management of artificial sounds and bird  droppings, he said.
Pang said, with 30 Government agencies in the  final stages of standardising the edible birdnest industry, local  authorities in the state should move forward and help the industry to  grow.
 
 
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