Thursday 25 April 2019

New publication on Red Kite in Doñana National Park !

Sergio F, Tanferna A, Chicano J, Blas J, Tavecchia G, Hiraldo F. 2019 Protected areas under pressure: decline, redistribution, local eradication and projected extinction of a threatened predator, the red kite, in Doñana National Park, Spain Endangered Species Research. 38: 189-204

Photo: S. Sergio
Abstract: After a period of overfocus on reserve establishment, growing attention is being devoted to the capability of protected areas to maintain viable populations of endangered species. Here, we examined the trends and reproduction of the red kite Milvus milvus, a highly endangered raptor near-endemic to Europe, to illustrate the dual benefits and challenges faced by a national park to protect this iconic species. Over the past 4 decades, the kite population of southern Spain has declined steeply and become progressively confined to Doñana National Park and its buffering Natural Park. Population deterioration was also evident within the protected area through (1) spikes of rapid eradication of whole sub-populations from buffer areas, likely propelled by illegal poisoning, and (2) more gradual but steady deterioration of numbers and reproduction, especially in peripheral-buffer areas, probably caused by the interplay of several shocks related to food availability, habitat degradation, competition, predation, and chemical contamination. The result was a 46–55% decline with progressive confinement to the core National Park and an alarming effective population size <10 pairs. Demographic modelling suggested low adult survival and predicted further declines, with possible extinction over the next 2 decades. We outline tentative goals for management, but these will need urgent information on ranging and mortality to provide more efficient targets. These results illustrate how establishment of a large park can prevent regional extinction, but not necessarily guarantee species-safety, leading to protracted forms of extinction debt. We suspect that similar dynamics will become more widespread as anthropogenic pressures increase around protected areas and their performance-monitoring becomes more prevalent.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.

SEAGHOSTS project on Storm Petrels!

Photo: V. Paris The EU-project SEAGHOSTS is on the starting blocks. The project, led by the University of Barcelona, joins 16 groups of rese...