Sayam U Chowdhury

Sayam U Chowdhury is a Conservation Biologist, currently working on threatened species conservation and research in Bangladesh and abroad.

Cyclone Amphan brings five new sea birds to Bangladesh

At least five new birds were seen for the first time in Bangladesh between May 21 and 22 this year.

4y ago

Brown Crake in Bangladesh: a century-long wait

It’s quite an incredible feat to still have more than 600 species of birds in our country and with the increasing numbers of birdwatchers and wildlife photographers every year, many new species are being discovered or rediscovered.

5y ago

The silent spirit of the skies

We awoke before sunrise to the sound of rain and the smell of wet earth, slightly worried about the trail that we were taking for the

6y ago

Nature Quest: A quest for eagle nest

Cool morning air brushed against my face as I looked at the plains where countrymen were out on their fields--plowing, irrigating, or

6y ago

A naturalist's letter to Dhaka parents

A narrow 50-meter creek running along a muddy road next to our house was a passage for fish and other aquatic animals.

7y ago

Nature Quest: Eden of egrets

Unlike winter, monsoon is a quiet season for bird-watchers and travellers but the season holds its own beauty. For nature lovers, it's a

7y ago

An unseen world worth preserving

I remember my failed attempts to draw the convoluted coast of Bangladesh during art classes possibly 25 years ago.

7y ago

Eyes in the shadows

Six years ago we were camping at Hail Haor in Moulvibazar's Sreemangal to study migratory passerine birds. Although our work involved watching birds early in the morning,

7y ago
August 19, 2016
August 19, 2016

Nature Quest: Where vultures come to feast

It was the end of July and the scorching sun was up above at midday. While Dhaka was still reeling from the July 1 tragedy, I

August 5, 2016
August 5, 2016

Gambling with the last glory of Bengal

While we have failed to protect most of our forests in Bangladesh for complex reasons, Sundarbans firmly stands in the south with all its glory.

July 29, 2016
July 29, 2016

Nature Quest: Feathered phantom of mangroves

It was still dark when I woke up and went to the roof of our boat, which was docked at the heart of Pashur river. The crows

June 10, 2016
June 10, 2016

Nature Quest: A day out with flying dragons

Almost tumbling down the damp and slimy slope, with thorny rattan snagging my arms, I struggled to keep my balance under

May 27, 2016
May 27, 2016

Blue beauty of Saint Martin's

I could barely wait when I first heard that a pair of blue birds had temporarily made their home on the southernmost tip of our land. It might sound

April 29, 2016
April 29, 2016

Is Sundarbans important only for tigers?

It is common knowledge now that the Sundarbans is home to globally endangered species like the Bengal Tiger but it is news to most that our Sundarbans also supports critically endangered species like the River Terrapin or the endangered Fishing Cat. Both of these species are undergoing a sharp decline and disappeared from most of their ranges throughout Asia.

April 22, 2016
April 22, 2016

Bangladesh's last Great Hornbills

If you have been to Bandarban town, you have probably seen a sculpture of a massive bird with a large bill sitting proudly in

April 10, 2015
April 10, 2015

We lost them 50 years ago!

After a wonderful bus ride through the hills and along a wide stream dotted with rocks and gravels, we reached the Jungle Safari

March 31, 2015
March 31, 2015

The living library

The rivers that carry stories from the Himalayas silently spread their throbbing veins across the mangroves to take on new shapes and spirits - in the face of the old weather beaten man, in the starchy yellow sari of the newlywed, in the dreams of the ten-year-old and in the countless faces that live in the tide country.

March 27, 2015
March 27, 2015

Nature Quest: A tale of tall trees and good men

Have you ever been to our hills, deep enough to know its real inhabitants? I suspect very few of us have been beyond the boundaries of the hill-towns.