Sukadana Journal
Housing Boom, if You’re a Bird
By JEFFERY DelVISCIO
SUKADANA, Indonesia — Along the spine-jarring road that runs through  this city on the South China Sea, in between the sparse, waterlogged  shacks of corrugated aluminum and wood, colorful buildings have begun to  sprout.        
Jeffery DelViscio/The New York Times
Buildings constructed to lure the edible-nest  swiftlet have been popping up in Indonesia. The nests are used in soup.                             
 Electronic Bird Calls From Inside a Swiftlet House in Indonesia
 Electronic Bird Calls From Inside a Swiftlet House in IndonesiaJeffery DelViscio/The New York Times
The nests, on sale in Jakarta, are highly prized, and go for almost $1,000 a pound.                            
 
 They tower over their low-slung surroundings with dollhouse facades,  colored in baby blues, sunshine yellows and ruby reds. Sukadana, a small coastal city in western Borneo, is in the midst of a  building boom. But the new houses are not for people. They are giant birdhouses playing an all-day siren call  through booming speakers to a small bird whose edible nests — at almost  $1,000 a pound — produce a broth that is highly prized, and highly  priced, in China. 
“They actually look nicer than a lot of the real houses,” said Andrew Teixeira de Sousa, field director for the Gunung Palung Orangutan Conservation Program,  which is active in the nearby Gunung Palung National Park. “But that’s  just because there’s a lot more money going into those buildings.” 
The bird — called, appropriately enough, the edible-nest swiftlet —  makes its nest by regurgitating long strands of sticky saliva onto the  wall of a cave or house, as the case may be. These strands harden into a  woven cup, weighing on average about a third of an ounce, that provides  a cradle for the birds’ young and hangs from the wall. 
Many Chinese believe that these hardened cups, when married with broth,  bestow special health benefits. Some Web sites claim the nests can help  fight disease, aid blood flow, strengthen the body, moisturize the skin  and even help mothers recover their youthful figures  more rapidly after childbirth. One company advises women to feed their  babies nest fragments dissolved in milk to “give the infant a flexible  mind.” 
Real or not, the supposed health benefits of the nests have allowed  sellers to charge a premium price. Iskandar, a village official in Riam  Berasap Jaya who like many Indonesians goes by one name, said a good  quality nest that had the classical cup shape and was free of dirt and  feathers could fetch $11 to $23. Mr. Iskandar, a former illegal logger, shares a property line with a  swiftlet house; he has many friends involved in the trade and is saving  up for one of his own. Since most of the forests in the area have been  bought up by palm plantations, he says, the logging business is not what  it once was. 
The edible bird’s nest has been in Indonesia for hundreds of years, but  it wasn’t until the advent of the CD player that the boom really took  off, said Lim Chan Koon, of the University of Malaysia, the co-author of  “The Swiftlets of Borneo.” 
Before then, people would venture into caves to gather the nests. “Some  wise guy thought of using playback of the swiftlets’ vocalization to  lure them into purposely built structures imitating the cavelike  environment,” he said. Once enticed inside, the swiftlets encounter an environment designed to  keep them regurgitating comfortably. Small openings in the rear of the  building allow them access but keep predators out. Holes allow air to  circulate but keep crosswinds to a whisper. 
There are large bird feeders, and open-face water tanks provide bathing  and drinking water. Misters keep the temperatures inside cool despite  the blistering daytime heat. Getting started in swiftlet farming requires what is, for this part of  the world, a significant amount of money. Mr. Iskandar said a  medium-size three-story swiftlet house can cost about $16,000 — a  prohibitive sum for many. 
Still, the houses keep going up. Almost every kink in the winding roads  here reveals another. On some of the straighter stretches, the houses  sit in clusters of threes and fours. In the early morning and evening when the birds return from foraging, the jostling around the entrances seems like an avian freeway exchange  — a black roiling mass of thousands of birds, each entering and exiting  faster than the human eye can track. And between the birds and the  electronic calls, the chirping never stops. 
Economists estimate the total value of the nesting trade ranges anywhere  from tens of millions of dollars to anyone’s guess. “The bird’s nest  industry is in the informal sector of Indonesia’s economy that is  difficult to estimate,” said Fauzi Ichsan, a senior economist with  Standard Chartered Bank. 
But the unregulated industry is also raising concerns that Indonesian  swiftlet farmers could be producing more than just nests. Indonesia is  acutely sensitive to bird-related disease scares. Since 2003, H5N1,  better known as the avian flu, has caused 146 deaths and fueled global  fears of a pandemic, and the toll in Indonesia is the highest in the  world, according to the World Health Organization. 
Some are concerned that the increasingly dense networks of swiftlet  houses could create disease flight paths for the avian flu, threatening  both the local bird populations and potentially humans, as well. Almost  as worrisome are the large water tanks inside each house that provide  prime breeding sites for mosquitoes that could carry dengue fever and  malaria — two tropical diseases of particular concern in Borneo. 
The profusion of bird droppings that cover the buildings and the  surrounding areas is also a concern. “When it’s dry, the wind will carry  any particles and germs in it, possibly causing various respiratory  diseases,” said Trisasi Lestari, a physician and researcher in the  public health department of Gadjah Mada University.        
But on the roads around Sukadana, potential health concerns seemed  secondary, and swiftlet house owners seemed more concerned with the  flightiness of the birds themselves. 
In Riam Berasap Jaya village, Budi sat in a sweltering room staring at a  mostly blank closed-circuit television screen. A recording of bird  calls screamed at high volume in the next room. It had been six months  since his swiftlet house was finished, but only a few nests dotted the  walls. Luck, Mr. Budi says, plays as great a role as preparation in swiftlet  farming. You see, he said with a sigh, you can entice an edible-nest  swiftlet to a birdhouse, but you can’t make it nest.
 
  
  
 
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