By Hafiz Ejaz Bashir
In an era when environmental degradation is accelerating and species extinction rates are rising, Pakistan is quietly nurturing one of the world’s most enduring habitat restoration efforts. Today, the Pakistan Army and Houbara Foundation International Pakistan completed their annual aerial broadcast of desert plant seeds across the Cholistan Desert, marking the twenty-seventh consecutive year of a project that has grown from an urgent local intervention into a long-running beacon of conservation and collaboration. The operation, carried out with precision and purpose, underscores a sustained commitment to heal a landscape long under pressure.

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The initiative began in 1998, when conservationists and military leaders sounded the alarm about a mounting ecological crisis in southern Punjab’s Cholistan region. Years of unchecked wood-cutting by local communities—driven by the need for fuel and construction materials—combined with intense, unmanaged grazing by livestock had stripped vital vegetation from the sand plains. What may have seemed like short-term solutions for livelihoods was, over time, undermining the very resources that sustained those livelihoods and the wildlife that relied upon them.
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For generations, the desert’s sparse but resilient flora supported a delicate web of life. Among the most affected was the Houbara Bustard, a ground-dwelling bird of migratory and cultural importance whose survival depends on the availability of native plants, seeds and insects. As vegetation thinned, the bustard and other desert-adapted species saw their food sources and nesting habitats diminish. The ecological consequences rippled outwards: declining wildlife populations, altered food chains, and greater vulnerability to desertification and climate variability.
Faced with these realities, Houbara Foundation International Pakistan joined forces with the Pakistan Army. The Foundation brought deep ecological knowledge and a focused conservation mandate; the Army contributed logistical capacity, operational reach and an ability to work at the scale required to address degradation across vast, remote tracts of desert. The partners adopted aerial seed broadcasting as the primary restoration technique—an approach that enables large-scale dispersal over areas inaccessible by vehicles and impractical to seed by hand.
This year’s operation saw 200 kilograms of locally sourced seeds—comprising native grasses and desert plants—broadcast across targeted zones of the Cholistan. Cumulatively, the project has now dispersed over 3,327 kilograms of seed since its inception. Those figures capture more than material inputs; they reflect decades of persistence, adaptive learning and a long-term view of restoration. Field teams from the Houbara Foundation conduct regular monitoring, and their reports show encouraging signs: improved germination rates in seeded plots, gradual increases in vegetative cover, and the return of some bird and small-mammal species to areas that had been largely barren.
The Cholistan, spanning tens of thousands of square kilometers, is an ecological and cultural landscape of special value. Its sand dunes, seasonal plains and scattered oases form the prime wintering grounds for the Houbara Bustard and provide habitat for reptiles, small mammals and a variety of drought-tolerant plants. Protecting and rebuilding this vegetation is not solely an act of local conservation; it serves broader commitments to biodiversity protection and contributes to global efforts to combat land degradation and desertification.
Restoration here carries multiple benefits. Rebuilding native plant communities supports the diets and breeding needs of resident wildlife, reduces soil erosion, and enhances the land’s capacity to retain limited moisture. Vegetative cover helps moderate ground temperatures and provides shelter, enabling insects and small animals to survive harsh spells. Over time, improved plant diversity and density can increase the resilience of the desert ecosystem against extreme weather and the slow creep of desertification driven by climate change.
Yet the task is far from simple. The Cholistan faces cyclical droughts and increasing climate variability that threaten seedlings before they can establish. Human pressures—continued reliance on wood for fuel and competition for grazing space—remain persistent challenges. The seeds broadcast into the sand must withstand extreme heat, occasional flash rains, and grazing by animals until they can germinate and take hold. Success requires not just aerial seeding but coordinated follow-up: monitoring, local engagement, and adaptive management attuned to the realities on the ground.
The Pakistan Army’s participation has been pivotal in addressing these logistical hurdles. Aircraft mobility ensures timely seed dispersal across wide areas; ground teams provide support for follow-up monitoring and protection; and the Army’s organizational capacity helps sustain the effort year after year. Complementing this, the Houbara Foundation’s ecological planning—selecting appropriate native species mixes, mapping priority areas, and evaluating germination outcomes—ensures that scientific considerations guide operational actions.
The project’s longevity also makes it a rare and valuable model for conservation worldwide. Many restoration initiatives falter when funding runs dry or when short-term objectives give way to shifting priorities. In contrast, this partnership’s twenty-seven-year arc demonstrates how steady commitment, clear roles, and shared responsibility can generate measurable ecological gains. The initiative aligns with international restoration ambitions and contributes to broader frameworks like global efforts to reverse biodiversity loss and the United Nations’ call for ecosystem restoration.
Future plans for the Cholistan effort emphasize integration with local communities and knowledge systems. Engaging residents in protection of regenerated patches, running awareness programs to discourage harmful wood-cutting, and offering alternatives for fuel and fodder are essential steps toward sustainability. There is also scope for academic collaboration to document long-term ecological changes, refine seeding techniques, and model the project’s contribution to carbon sequestration and climate resilience.
At its heart, the Cholistan restoration is a story about patience and partnership. Each year’s broadcast—each kilogram of seed—represents a long-range investment. As seeds settle into dune soils and await the right moments to sprout, they carry the hopes of conservationists, soldiers, scientists and local communities alike. Their gradual emergence will be a living testament to what can be achieved when human determination works with natural processes rather than against them.
In a media landscape that too often focuses on environmental loss, the Cholistan’s recovery offers a powerful counter-narrative. It is a reminder that meaningful ecological repair requires sustained effort, operational skill and an inclusive vision that brings together institutions and people. The Cholistan Desert may still look harsh to a passing eye, but for those who have followed the project for nearly three decades, every patch of green that returns is proof that restoration—however slow—can succeed. The seeds sown today are an assurance that the desert’s natural heritage can be protected and revitalized for generations to come.
