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Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 BUSHMEAT AND EUROPEAN MIGRATORY BIRDS CONSERVATION by Carlo Contesso A Major Paper submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Natural Resources Major: Natural Resources Committee Dr. David L. Trauger, Chair; Dr. Gary R. Evans, Dr. Heather E. Eves, Dr. Michael J. Mortimer September 10, 2009 Falls Church, VA Key Words: Africa, Afro-Palearctic bird, biodiversity conservation, bushmeat, Europe, flyway, long-distance migratory bird, migratory bird 1 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Bushmeat and European migratory birds conservation Carlo Contesso ABSTRACT In 1979 the Bonn Convention (CMS) was internationally signed to secure the conservation of migratory species, yet still today many long-distance migrants wintering in Africa are decreasing and not all the drivers behind these negative population trends are known. In the wake of international wildlife conservation efforts to stop biodiversity loss, this paper draws attention to an almost uninvestigated possible cause, the African consumptive use of wildlife, known south of the Sahara as bushmeat. In order to estimate the likelihood of a relation between these two phenomena, this deskstudy analyzes together ornithological and bushmeat sources. While insufficient data is currently available to cement a connection at this time, this investigation supports the necessity of further research on migratory birds on their non breeding ranges, as already supported by the ornithological world. It individuates the necessity of deepening our knowledge of bushmeat use in the Sahelian countries, especially by nomadic populations, and in Sudan and Ethiopia. It points out the lack of detailed data on avian prey recorded today in bushmeat literature, and the fact that agro-pastoralist communities might consume more bird prey outside the bushmeat trade. This work is not intended to be conclusive, but naturally leads to more research and new conservation/management actions for the preservation of biodiversity at international level. ii Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................................1 MIGRATORY BIRDS.................................................................................................................2 Western Palearctic and Afro-Palearctic migratory birds (APM) ...............................3 The flyway concept ..........................................................................................................6 APM conservation status .................................................................................................8 PRINCIPAL CAUSES FOR APM DECLINES .......................................................................11 EU Common Agricultural Policy and Agri-environment Regulation ........................12 Agricultural development in Africa: desertification, chemicals, and food .................13 Climate change .................................................................................................................15 Premigratory fattening and hunting in the Mediterranean regions ...........................16 CONSERVATION TOOLS FOR APM.....................................................................................19 The Bern, Bonn and Rio Conventions ...........................................................................19 The African Convention on the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources .....21 The African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement (AEWA) ...............................................21 The EU Bird and Habitat Directives, Nature 2000 and the Emerald Network .........22 The Important Bird Areas (IBAs) ..................................................................................25 THE BUSHMEAT PHENOMENON IN THE AFRICAN RANGELANDS .........................28 East and Southern Africa ................................................................................................29 Sahel ..................................................................................................................................32 DISCUSSION ...............................................................................................................................33 Bird hunting in sub-Saharan Africa may be more habitual than currently believed ............................................................................................................................................33 APM and the adaptability of the bushmeat phenomenon............................................36 The indirect threat of ecosystem disturbance ...............................................................39 CONCLUSION ............................................................................................................................41 REFERENCES .............................................................................................................................45 APPENDIX I ...................................................................................................................................56 iii Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 INTRODUCTION Papageno: “Der Vogelfänger bin ich ja, Stets lustig heissa hopsasa! Ich Vogelfänger bin bekannt bei Alt und Jung im ganzen Land. (…)” “The bird-catcher I am indeed, Always happy, heidi heh hey! I, the bird-catcher, am well known To old and young throughout the land.” W.A. Mozart (librettist E. Schikaneder). 1791. Die Zauberflöte. Act 1, scene 2. Exploiting birds, either for food or to be kept as melodious pets, is such a common custom in many societies that a bird-catcher found his place in one of music’s most successful masterpieces, as sang in this renowned cavatina. Catching birds is a relatively simple and rewarding use of wildlife; it does not require the means and effort needed to hunt large game. It can pass rather unnoticed, and it yields an excellent source of protein. The roots of this practice can be traced back into antiquity. For instance in Boboli, the very first renaissance garden built in Florence in the second half of the 1500s, there are still the ragnaie (i.e. the places of the spiders), straight alleys cut among sweet bay (Laurus nobilis) and evergreen oak (Quercus ilex) thickets which were lined with fine nets to catch songbirds for the Medici’s aviaries and banquets. In another example, Egyptian bird hunting scenes are depicted on the walls of the tomb of Neb-Amun, in Thebes, dating back to ca. 1350 BC. Ancient customs have remained firmly rooted, as the reported export to Europe of almost two million Common Quails (Coturnix coturnix) trapped in 1913 in Modern Egypt (Brouwer & Boere 2009), the 38,000 shot during only two months in Serbia in 2003 (TRAFFIC 2008) and the estimated total of 500 million migrant birds trapped or killed every year in the Mediterranean area (http://www.BirdLife.org/action/change/sustainable-hunting/index.html). Notwithstanding international efforts toward the conservation of European biodiversity, many migratory species which breed in Europe and winter in Africa are declining. Most of the 1 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 international efforts concentrate on waterbirds and soaring birds, whose ecology is better known. Contrastingly, to date migratory landbirds are less protected by European conservation efforts in their non-breeding ranges, especially small long-distance migrants whose movements in the African continent are less known. Some of the causes for these declines have been identified, yet there is a pressing need for continued research, to secure conservation and invert the negative trends. This study investigates the likelihood of a connection between the rampant overhunting/bushmeat crisis which is plaguing most of sub-Saharan rangelands, and longdistance migrant’s populations. After a concise introduction to European migratory birds, their known causes for decline, and the principal international agreements for their protection, with a particular emphasis on European activities, this paper focuses on the bushmeat phenomenon, the exploitation of birds as bushmeat, and of possible effects the trend might have on European longdistance migratory birds. MIGRATORY BIRDS According to the Convention on Migratory Species UNEP/CMS, migratory species are defined as “the entire population or any geographically separate part of the population of any species or lower taxon of wild animals, a significant proportion of whose members cyclically and predictably cross one or more national jurisdictional boundaries” (http://www.csm.int/). Of the known 9,856 bird species present on Earth, 1,855 are migratory. They take advantage of seasonal resources breeding in one region and then, when food availability changes, spending the non-breeding months in others regions. There are 181 nomadic species, whose migrations do not follow regular directional and spatial patterns; 262 are marine and coastal birds, also known as 2 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 seabirds, whose routes cross the oceans or go from coast to coast; and 343 are altitudinal migrants, moving seasonally between lower and higher elevations within the same region. The largest group is made up of 1,593 migratory land- and waterbirds, representing 16% of the avian species which populate the Antarctic, Indomalayan, Australasian, Nearctic, Neotropical, Afrotropical and Palearctic geographic realms (Kirby et al. 2008; BirdLife International 2008). Western Palearctic and Afro-Palearctic migratory birds (APM) Most but not all the western Palearctic species spend their whole life cycle in Eurasia; a few hundreds have their breeding grounds there, but spend the non-breeding season in Africa. Often their African range is called the wintering range with clear reference to the European and north Asian winter. But since the African continent spans across both austral and boreal hemispheres, and different populations of the same migratory species may use both hemispheres during the European winter, the term “non-breeding” is considered more accurate than wintering (Kirby et al. 2008) and will be referred to in this paper hereafter. Land and water migratory birds can be broadly divided into three groups: 1) Waterbirds, 162 species. Birds such as geese, ducks, and swans Anatidiae, herons and egrets Ardeidae, and rails Rallidae, are dependant on suitable wetlands for resting and feeding (i.e. staging or stop-over sites) where they converge in large numbers, especially during migrations. They tend to follow well known routes, using the same stop-over sites reliably, and the concept of flyway was originally ideated taking in consideration waterfowls migratory routes (Kirby et al. 2008; Brouwer & Boere 2009). 2) Soaring birds, 67 species. 3 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Many raptors, such as eagles Accipitridae, are also forced to follow recognizable paths, just as the previous group. These birds are unable to sustain large tracts of the long journey by just flapping their wings. Instead, they rely on hot air columns which waft them to high altitudes, from where they glide to the next. Such ascending currents, known as thermals, are found only over land, so migrants are forced to avoid crossing the vast expanse of the Mediterranean Sea. For this reason, they tend to follow leading lines—topographical features as Mountain chains or coastlines—which ensure convenient thermals along the route and lead them to the shortest water crossings. These crossings are called bottlenecks, where large numbers of soaring birds converge, as it happens for waterbirds at wetlands. The major bottlenecks for APM soaring birds are Gibraltar and Jbel Moussa in Morocco, the Strait of Messina in Sicily, Malta and the Mediterranean islands, Cape Bon in Tunisia, the Bosporus and the Belen Pass in Turkey (BirdLife International 2006; Kirby et al. 2008; Brouwer & Boere 2009). 3) Landbirds, 420 species. This category is comprised mostly of passerine songbirds such as Old World warblers Sylviidae, chats and Old World flycatchers Muscicapidae, and cuckoos Cuculidae. These birds can sustain long active flights and are relatively more adaptable while migrating. Without being forced by topographic features as in the previous groups, they traverse large obstacles like the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara desert on more direct trajectories, traveling on broad fronts. Migration timings and patterns are species and population specific; for example, many songbirds migrate at night and in the early hours of the day (Schmaljohann et al. 2007). Our overall knowledge of landbirds’ migration, such as their site fidelity, food preferences during their journey and movements in the African continent, is still very limited especially for the smaller species, but there is mounting evidence that even these birds rely on specific staging areas. These 4 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 critical sites are numerous and often small, scattered along a very large front; for which, the population sink is a relevant dynamic to consider. A sink habitat is usually defined as a lowquality area, where local mortality surpasses local reproductive success for a given species (With and King 2001). Since no reproduction takes places directly on staging sites, but breeding success also depends on them, the sink dynamic triggered at staging sites becomes apparent later, when the birds return to their nesting grounds. If these key habitats are damaged or disturbed and transformed into population sinks, unknowingly to the scientific community and without intervention by conservationists, the condition of the whole migratory route is impaired. The vast geographic range on which landbirds cyclically move requires the monitoring of many numerous factors, and the implementation of a broad-scale, intercontinental protection policy to ensure their favorable conservation status (Yohannes et al. 2007; Kirby et al. 2008; Brouwer & Boere 2009). Amongst the western Palearctic birds breeding within the European Union (EU), 121 species are long-distance migrants. These birds embark on the long journey to reach their nonbreeding grounds south of the Sahara Desert; these are called Afro-Palearctic migratory (APM) birds (Brooks & Shokellu Thompson 2001; Sanderson et al. 2006). Some of the long-distance migratory species, subspecies or populations have adapted to the different seasonal resources offered at particular latitudes, adopting a two-step or leap-frog migration. They may rest for up to three months in the Sahel, or right after having crossed the Arabian deserts, and then continue their journey southward. The emerging general pattern shows that populations which breed in the Mediterranean area (e.g. Yellow Wagtail Montacilla flava iberiae, M.f. cinerecapilla and M.f. feldegg) are the ones which travel less, wintering in North Africa, as short-distance migrants do, or in the Sahel. Birds breeding in Central Europe (e.g. M. f. flava), spend the non-breeding 5 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 season in a vast area of the continent which spans from the Sahelian zone to central Africa. While the northern breeders (e.g. M. f. thunbergi) spend the first part of the European winter in the same territory of the Central European population, then move southward, taking advantage of the food availability generated by the shifting rain seasons (Figure 1), and leave Southern-East and Southern Africa for their breeding ranges later than the other populations. The time span of the migration period depends on the geographic extension of the species range, the availability and the use of resting-places, and the number of birds migrating (BirdLife International 2006; Bell 2007). Figure 1: Timing and duration of rainfall in sub-Saharan Africa (from Dodman & Diagana 2007) The flyway concept A flyway is the full range of the habitat used by a migratory bird: the breeding site, the nonbreeding site, and all the territories in/over which the birds pass and rest during the migration. Boere and Strout (2006) define it as “The biological systems of migratory paths that directly link sites and ecosystems in different countries and continents.” Another definition can be all the geographic areas occupied by a population, species or group during the year; the regions where they simply pass through and the ones where the birds remain for a prolonged time, intended as a single unit. It is now generally accepted that to ensure the conservation of any migratory species it is not sufficient to ensure its protection only in some 6 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Figure 2: Simplified diagram of the flyways of Afro-Palearctic migratory birds (from Fry et al. 1982-2004; LIFE 2007; BirdLife International 2008; http://www.borntotravelcampaign.com/FlyWays/) 7 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 critical areas, as the breeding grounds or bottleneck/stop-over sites, but protection needs to be ensured on the totality of its range/flyway. There are three main flyways used by APM to reach their non-breeding ranges. Birds starting their journey mainly in Eastern Europe and Western Russia follow the EastMediterranean flyway (SSE). It spans the East cost of the Mediterranean, the Jordan Rift Valley, passes over the Sinai, the Nile Valley in Egypt and Sudan where it veers toward Central Sahel, or merges into the Eastern African Flyway (which begins in the Nile Valley, runs through the Great Rift Valley and down into east South Africa). The Mid-Mediterranean flyway (SSW) is used by migrants that breed in Central Europe, which extends from Italy, Sicily, Malta, the Tunisian Islands, enters the African Continent at Djebel El Haouaria, and then splits. One branch continues southward toward the Sahel, the other southeast into the Eastern African Flyway. The East Atlantic coastal flyway/SW Mediterranean, which includes the Strait of Gibraltar and continues along the African west coast, is used by many coastal and waterbirds, and migrants from western Europe (BirdLife International 2006a). As mentioned before, landbirds are not forced to follow these flyways as soaring and waterbirds are, but some of their stop-overs are located along them. APM conservation status In Europe there are various Memoranda of Understanding (MOU) for species or groups of species with a formal Unfavorable Conservation Status and Single Species Action Plans (SSAP), which are also active in some North African and East Mediterranean countries. The Aquatic Warbler (Acrocephalus paludicola) and migratory raptors are covered by international MOUs under the Bonn Convention. The Lesser Spotted Eagle (Aquila pomarina), Lesser Kestrel (Falco 8 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 naumanni), Red-footed Falcon (Falco vespertinus), Eleonora’s Falcon (Falco eleonorae), Corncrake (Crex crex), Roseate Tern (Sterna dougalii), European Roller (Coracias garrulus) and the Aquatic Warbler are considered priority interests for the EU, as agreed by the Ornis Committee, and covered by appropriate SSAPs, funded by LIFE, the financial instrument of the Council of Europe. Figure 3: Extent and distribution of sub-Saharan rangelands (from Homewood 2004; Fry et al. 1982-2004) Unfortunately, these efforts cover only a minimal percentage of the declining species (see APPENDIX I). Among all western Palearctic birds, long-distance APMs are the ones which are 9 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 faring worst. About 54% of them, which is 48 species out of 121, have shown consistent negative trends for the period 1970-2000, especially small insectivore and omnivore landbirds which spend the non-breeding season in dry open environments (i.e. hyperarid, arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas) of sub-Saharan rangelands, occurring in the Sahel, East and Southern Africa (Figure 3). Most of these species do not officially meet the criteria required to be added to the IUCN Red List, notwithstanding their negative population trends, since: “The species have an extremely large range, and hence do not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence <20,000 km2 combined with a declining or fluctuating range size, habitat extent/quality, or population size and a small number of locations or severe fragmentation). Despite the fact that the population trend appears to be decreasing, the decline is not believed to be sufficiently rapid to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion (>30% decline over ten years or three generations). The population size is very large, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population size criterion (<10,000 mature individuals with a continuing decline estimated to be >10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure).” (from BirdLife International Species Data http://www.birdlife.org/datazone/species/index.html?action=SpcHTMDetails.asp&sid=2498&m =0) Only about 8% of APM landbirds are currently classified as Threatened or Nearly Threatened. Some scientists, like Kirby et al. (2008), caution that many more may unknowingly already meet the IUCN Red List criteria, given the difficulty of assessing declines on populations dispersed over vast geographical ranges. The Sahel alone, which is the first critical staging site 10 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 after crossing the Sahara when flying south and the non-breeding range of many birds, stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to the Red Sea in the east, spanning over about 1.6 billion hectares and ten African countries. The sustained declines do not show any positive relation to breeding habitats or phylogeny, since they do not affect residents and short-distance migrants which share the same breeding grounds, and occur among AMP of different orders and families. The causes for such declines are not completely understood, but some have already been identified (BirdLife International 2004; Sanderson et al. 2006, Kirby et al. 2008; http://www.iucnredlist.org/). PRINCIPAL CAUSES FOR APM DECLINES Most papers and reports on APMs denounce the lack of scientific data and the poor understanding of migrant’s ecology and population dynamics in their sub-Saharan ranges, especially for those species which move on a broad front. They urge more research on the nonbreeding grounds in the African continent to gather the information necessary to better understand the reasons behind such declines, discover and prevent new threats, and improve conservation (Brooks & Shokellu Thompson 2001; Sanderson et al. 2006; Muchai et al. 2007; Norris & Marra 2007; Wisz et al. 2007; Kirby et al. 2008). These birds have low recapture rates, thus ring recovery, and cannot be observed with Global Positioning System (GPS) wildlife tracking, since their diminutive size prohibits the application of even the smallest GPS device. The recent technique of studying feather stableisotope profiles, where no recapturing of the same bird is required, is a promising tool to improve our knowledge of small APMs (Yohannes et al. 2007). While more research is needed, the 11 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 following factors have already been identified as drivers of current declines, many of them having anthropogenic origins. EU Common Agricultural Policy and Agri-environment Regulation The increase of agro-environments, especially intensive ones, driven by the constantly growing demand for food by our rising human population is one of the primary threats to birds. Land which has been transformed for intensive agriculture is inhospitable to most species due to the loss of roosting and breeding places, limited food availability and the negative impact of pesticides and other chemicals used for crop protection and production. Similarly, overgrazing negatively affects bird populations, altering the vegetative cover and reducing general food availability altogether. These phenomena have been extensively studied in Europe (BirdLife International 2004; Kirby et al. 2008). The EU Common Agricultural Policy, which led to a widespread agricultural intensification in the 1970s, caused a dramatic reduction among birds that thrived within the mosaic of land previously cultivated with extensive regimes. In the United Kingdom and the Netherlands alone, during the past 35 years of agricultural development, farmland associated birds have plummeted to less than 60% of their original numbers (Berendse et al. 2004). In 1992 the Agri-environment Regulation (2078/92) was passed with the intention of stopping and reversing these negative trends by implementing purportedly sustainable agroenvironmental schemes. Such schemes have shown limited benefits thus far, since birds that are specialist breeders on farmland do not seem to favor the lands enrolled in these schemes. Even when they do, and a higher hatchling survival rate is observed, the fledglings often disperse into neighboring land not managed according to the same principles. This results in high juvenile 12 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 mortality, limited reproductive success, and impaired recruitment. Further, the highest mortality rates are still recorded during long migrations when the birds leave the boundaries of the sustainable agro-environmental schemes (Berendse et al. 2004). Agricultural development in Africa: desertification, chemicals, and food The phenomenon of agricultural intensification concerns areas of sub-Saharan rangelands, as well, and it is a threat bound to increase in the near future due to demographic trends. According to the projections of the United Nations, the population of most African countries within subSaharan rangelands, like Niger, Chad, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Malawi, will double by 2040 (UNPD 2008). The simple transition from a natural state to agricultural intensification such as overcultivation and overgrazing, the implementation of inappropriate practices such as the cultivation of marginal and easily eroded land, and the unsafe abuse of chemicals to boost crop production, have been identified as having negative impacts on APM (Sinclair et al. 2002; Darkoh 2003; Cresswell et al. 2007; Mwenja 2008; Brouwer & Boere 2009). The combined effects of droughts, inappropriate cultivation and irrigation have caused the desertification of much of the Sahel, a key staging site for APMs. The southward extension of the Sahara Desert means that more birds do not have enough energy to survive the longer journey across the desert (Stoate et al.1995; Jones et al. 1996; Cresswell et al. 2007). Large stretches of the remaining area, the non-breeding grounds of many species, are now inhospitable as a result of the substantial use of chemicals. In the past 30 years, during which sub-Saharan agriculture increased only of 4%, the use of fertilizers increased 300%, and the importation of pesticides increased 500% (FAOSTAT 2009). 13 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Kenya is an important stop-over country on the Eastern African flyway and the nonbreeding range of many APM species. Intensive horticulture destined for international exportation is the fastest-growing sector of the Kenyan economy, expanding in the Rift Valley for the production of vegetables and especially cut flowers, for which larger quantities of chemicals are employed (FAO 2002; see http://www.kenyaflowercouncil.org/). Various studies have been conducted on the effects of agriculture on resident Afrotropical birds in East and Southern Africa, indicating a strong correspondence between human density and biodiversity loss. The constant encroachment of agriculture on grassland in sub-Saharan Africa has caused the decline of some grassland-specific species, such as the Sharpe’s Longclaw (Macronyx sharpei). For example, on the Kinangop Plateau in the Nyandarua district of Central Kenya, situated between the Aberdare Mountains and the Rift Valley at an altitude of ca. 2,500 meters and along the major East African flyway, the local Kikuyu population is increasing and the native grasslands are being progressively converted to agriculture, or used as pastures and overgrazed by livestock (Muchai et al. 2002; Ndang’ang’a et al 2002; Muchai et al. 2007). Similar results are recorded in the agricultural areas of the Kilimanjaro region in Tanzania (Soini 2006). In Southern Africa, the combined pressures of unregulated hunting and agriculture have caused the decline and the local extirpation of Helmeted Guineafowl (Numida meleagris) a common game species (Pero & Crowe 1996; Ratcliff & Crowe 2001). The areas impacted by these declines are the non-breeding grounds of APM, as the Common Quail, whose populations are depleted, and the Nearly Threatened Corncrake, a species of global concern. Even the transformation to non-technologically advanced agriculture, without the use of chemicals, negatively impacts avifauna’s diversity and density. The comparative study by Sinclair et al. (2002), finds a 20 to 50% reduction of the insects, and only 10% of the original 14 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 population of tree-feeders birds, 30% of ground-feeders and 65% of shrub-feeders in an area converted to subsistence agriculture from the contiguous protected savannah of the Serengeti. The disappearance of the original plant community creates an inhospitable environment, especially for small insectivores that feed in the grass layer, such as APM pipits Montacillidae and warblers Sylviidae, and those which rely on sparse native trees to ambush their prey, such as APM shrikes Laniidae. Environmental alteration due to development, such as large scale infrastructure in the African continent is presently only a minor threat. Similarly, new artificial obstacles, such as wind turbines, power lines and antennae are still a small factor here, but which can have important consequences if misplaced in the vicinity of bottleneck sites around the Mediterranean, or along one of the African flyways (Brouwer & Boere 2009). Climate change Global warming is another cause for APM declines. Some of these declines are the result of the aforementioned expansion of the Sahara Desert and the sahelianization of large portions of the south/southeastern sudanian region of the Sahel, which is not crossed by all declining species (Sanderson et al. 2006). Additional impact of climate change is evidenced by the fact that milder winter temperatures in the breeding grounds favor short distance migrant and resident populations. Birds that reach the breeding grounds early can choose better nesting sites, and have a higher reproductive success. Responding to environmental clues, short-distance migrants are able to anticipate their return to the breeding grounds and have first choice of their territory (Forchhammer et al. 2002), while resident species show higher winter survival rates (Lemoine & Böhning-Gaese 2003), thus both categories are at a competitive advantage versus 15 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 intercontinental long-distance migrants. In addition, temperature and precipitation on nonbreeding grounds are environmental clues for the onset of the APM spring migration, which is now delayed. They not only arrive in Europe later, but their departure for the autumn migration is only minimally delayed, for the different impact of climate change in the northern hemisphere. Thus, APMs may not have the time to build enough fat reserves and their fledglings may be too immature for the long journey (Gordo et al. 2004). The rising mean temperatures are slowly altering most ecosystems. This is particularly worrisome for trans-Saharan migrants, whose movements in the African continent are poorly known, and may see some key staging sites disappear. It has also been recently demonstrated that long-distance migratory birds have smaller brains, more specialized feeding requirements (e.g. cannot adjust their diets to diverse food resources) and are less flexible then their resident phylogenic counterparts. They are forced to migrate to avoid winter starvation. Their overall behavioral inflexibility puts them at a disadvantage to face the current climatic and environmental trends (Sol et al. 2005; Schultz et al. 2005). Premigratory fattening and hunting in the Mediterranean regions Long migrations are an enormous endeavor, especially for small birds that cross the vastness of the Mediterranean Sea or the Sahara Desert. To succeed, they undergo various physiological and behavioral adjustments prior and during the migration. Their body fat reserves increase to provide enough fuel, since they will be unable to feed for long periods of time. In addition, the lean mass of the flight muscles, such as the large pectorals, increases proportionately to sustain the heavier weight and the lengthy continuous effort (Bairlein 1985). Their foraging behavior also is altered. The birds need to dedicate more time to feeding but, being forced to find enough 16 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 food in a short period of time before departure, their flight distance from danger shortens (Bednekoff & Houston 1994). Finally, to achieve reproductive success, they need to arrive back on their breeding grounds with enough energy reserves (Drent & Daan 1980), thus the premigratory fattening may be augmented in Africa (Jones et al. 1996). When these physiological and behavioral characteristics of migrants are combined with the fact that they travel in large numbers, at predictable times of the year, experience fatigue upon arrival and are easier and more nutritious prey than resident birds, it is no wonder that man has exploited such bounty for millennia. The EU fully recognizes the sustainable hunting of wild birds as a legitimate use of natural resources, as addressed in Article 10 of the Convention on Biological Diversity and by the Directive 79/409/EEC on the Conservation of Wild Birds (United Nations 1993, p.150; see http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/conservation/wildbirds/hunting/index_en.htm#huntinggui de). Nevertheless, unregulated seasonal hunting at bottlenecks and staging sites (i.e. islands, wetlands, oases, etc. on the migratory route) and along the coasts of the Mediterranean is another major threat to APMs. In the Mediterranean region, hunting has deep cultural roots, and it was once important for the subsistence of large numbers of poor people. Today, notwithstanding the limited of data available on hunting in the south/southeastern part of this region (Sanderson et al. 2006; BirdLife 2006, 2007; Kirby et al. 2008; Brouwer & Boere 2009), the impact of subsistence hunting is considered only marginal and recreational hunting appears to be the most common hunting form for waterfowl and large migratory birds (BirdLife International 2006b). The use of modern technology, the combined impact of leisure hunting in some countries with unclear or un-enforced legislation (e.g., Lebanon, Malta), and the incomplete information on wildlife population and mortality essential to calculate equitable bag limits, have led to gross 17 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 over-harvests. It is estimated that a total of one half to a billion migratory birds are shot in the Mediterranean countries every year, by approximately 10 million hunters. Shooting is the most common technique; however nets, snares, lime sticks, traps, decoys, and poison are also used. With increasing human population trends, hunting pressure on resident birds is likely to increase, and when the resident game population becomes less available, the pressure on migratory birds intensifies (Brouwer & Boere 2009). Some species such as the Common Quail, European Turtledove (Steptopelia turtur) and many warblers, are exposed to illegal gourmandizing. They are hunted in South-east and Central Europe and traded to Italy, France and Malta where they are consumed as delicacies (TRAFFIC 2008). In compliance with the Bird Directive, in 2004 the Council of Europe with the assistance of the African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement Secretariat (AEWA), launched the Sustainable Hunting Project Workshop (LIFE 04 TCY/INT/000054), whose stakeholders are Algeria, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Palestine, Tunisia and Syria, and involves local governments and international and national NGOs within the Mediterranean area (BirdLife International 2006). The aforementioned subsistence hunting is a less studied phenomenon. It is still recorded in Egypt for ca. 500 families on the North Sinai, which practice the traditional autumn mist netting of Common Quails, part of which are traded, and in the Nile Delta, where quails and songbirds are trapped by farmers and fishermen. The capture of songbirds is also common in the oases of the Western Egyptian Desert, especially during the spring migration and in Syria. In rural Lebanon, small bird trapping for consumption is carried out by women in the less affluent parts of the country (BirdLife International 2006a). So far, climate change, agricultural development both in Europe and in Africa, and hunting in the Mediterranean area are considered the main drivers of APM declines. In the 18 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 following section is a concise presentation of the most relevant international existing agreements to ensure protection for these long-distance migrants. CONSERVATION TOOLS FOR APM Besides the Ramsar Convention, which promotes the conservation and wise use of wetlands of international importance around the world and maintains a list of almost 1847 such sites (http://www.ramsar.org/), and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of wild fauna and flora (CITES), which aims to ensure the sustainable international trade of wildlife around the globe, signed by most governments and covers about 33,000 species of plants and animals (http://www.cites.org/), there are a number of international treaties, agreements and nationally protected areas for the conservation of APM. The following is a concise presentation of the most relevant to APM landbirds. The Bern, Bonn and Rio Conventions In the multifaceted European political reality, wildlife conservation is a challenging task. Fortynine European countries are signatories of the European Union (EU). The European Commission is the executive branch of the EU, and is constituted of nearly 40 Directorates-General (DG), one of which is the DG for the Environment. Its objectives are to protect, preserve and improve the environment and biodiversity. This is achieved by proposing policies, controlling Member States’ compliance with EU environmental law, investigating complaints and taking legal action when needed (EC, 2009a). The Convention on the Conservation of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats, the Bern Convention of 1973 (it came into force in 1982) promotes the protection of more than 1000 19 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 animal species and habitats across the EU signatories, which require international effort for effective conservation due to their trans-boundary occurrence. By means of different Annexes, the Convention offers a hierarchy of protected species and hunting and capturing techniques which are forbidden within the signatory countries of the EU. Its Annexes are organized as follows: • Annex I enumerates strictly protected habitats and species • Annex II enumerates habitats and species of particular interest • Annex III enumerates the criteria to choose habitats and species in App. I & II • Annex IV enumerates the species with a special level of protection • Annex V enumerates the species which need a management plan to be harvested in nature • Annex VI enumerates forbidden hunting practices. Non-EU countries, Tunisia and Morocco, are formal observers of this convention (http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/Commun/QueVoulezVous.asp?NT=104&CM=8&DF=9/23/20 08&CL=ENG). The Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), also called the Bonn Convention, referring to the place where it was signed in 1979, was born from the challenge of protecting fauna whose range encompasses cyclically international frontiers and thus different jurisdictions. This global treaty gathered different nations together to write species’ specific regulations apt to secure the conservation of all the species listed in Appendix I, migratory species threatened with extinction, and the sustainable use of those in Appendix II, migratory species which benefit from international cooperation. At the last Conference of the Parties, in December 2008, CMS launched an “open-ended working group” on global bird flyways, whose aim is to suggest the future actions on this issue by CMS (http://www.csm.int/). 20 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 In 2001 all the EC Member States adopted the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). This international treaty was signed by 150 governments in 1992 in Rio de Janeiro, for the conservation of biological diversity, the sustainable use of its components, and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits from the use of the genetic resources. It aims to halt biodiversity loss in Europe, by 2010. The EU Biodiversity Action Plan was finalized in 2006. But the Action Plan Report of 2008 announced that the EU is far from meeting its target in 2010 and major efforts are required just to get close to the established goal (http://www.cbd.int/convention/; EC 2009b). The African Convention on the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources Twenty-eight of the 53 African countries are signatories to this Treaty whose fundamental principle, expressed in the Article II is "the Contracting States shall undertake to adopt the measures necessary to ensure conservation, utilization and development of soil, water, floral and faunal resources in accordance with scientific principles and with due regard to the best interests of the people" (http://sedac.ciesin.org/entri/texts/african.conv.conserva.1969.html). Unfortunately, APMs whose movement and presence are scarcely known in most African countries, already plagued by more pressing wars, famines, political instabilities, etc, are understandably a low priority. The African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement (AEWA) AEWA was enacted in 1999 and focuses on 23 families, 255 species and 517 populations of Palearctic migratory birds ecologically dependent on wetlands. It was signed by 119 European, Asiatic and African countries, including the northernmost tip of Canada. A comprehensive Action Plan describes the various conservation efforts required by the Parties to the Agreement. 21 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 These efforts range from education, research and monitoring, to species and habitat conservation, and management of human interactions. It is currently the largest agreement under the CMS for number of protected species and the geographic area covered which implements the flyway approach for migratory bird protection (http://www.unep-aewa.org/). The wetlands covered by this agreement are important staging sites of many AMP landbirds, such as some warblers. The EU Bird and Habitat Directives, Natura 2000 and the Emerald Network The Council Directive 79/409/EEC on the Conservation of Wild Birds (EU Birds Directive) provides the minimum legal requirements and standards that all Member States must comply with for the protection of Western Palearctic birds in Europe, as part of the implementation of the Bern Convention. Hunting, as one of the major interactions of humans with birds, has particular importance within the Directive. Hunting and falconry are regulated by Articles 7 and 8. While management plans for all game species listed in Appendix II are in process of completion, hunting has stirred many controversies between conservationists and hunting lobbyists. The EU formally recognizes its legitimacy as a form of sustainable use and for its cultural value, which provides social and environmental benefits. In 2001, the Sustainable Hunting Initiative started a new dialogue between regulating bodies and the NGOs. It was followed in 2004 by the Sustainable Hunting Agreement, signed by BirdLife International and the Federation of Associations for Hunting and Conservation of the EU. In 2007, the guidance document on hunting was updated. Annex II enumerates the huntable species within the EU, and Annex III specifies for which huntable species trade is allowed. This has been one of the main efforts of the Directive. 22 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Each Member State has to select Special Protection Areas (SPAs) for all migratory birds and the 192 avian species and habitats listed in Annex I of the Bern Convention, with a particular attention to wetlands (Article 4). In 1993, the development of Action Plans and Memoranda of Understandings began for endangered or vulnerable species of global concern, a priority for EU. Governmental agencies, NGOs and individual scientists collaborated on it. Finally, Article 10 encourages relevant research (http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/legislation/birdsdirective/index-en.htm). The Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the Conservation of Natural Habitats and of Wild Fauna and Flora (EU Habitat Directive) provides the framework for the protection of biodiversity in Europe through the conservation of natural habitats and of its wild fauna and flora, as part of the implementation of the Bern Convention in the EU. The EU territory has been divided into nine different bioregions (e.g. Alpine, Atlantic, Black Sea, Boreal, Continental, Macaronesian, Mediterranean, Pannonian and Steppic) to facilitate the management and conservation of similar sites occurring in different countries. Each Member State is required to propose a national list of Sites of Community Importance (SICs). After evaluation and approval by the EC, such sites become Special Areas of Conservation (SACs), which form a network of protected areas within the EU. The Directive’s Annexes list the habitats that require the designation of SACs in Annex I; the fauna and flora species that require the designation of a SAC in Annex II; the Criteria for SACs are reported in Annex III; Annex IV lists all the protected fauna and flora, while Annex V identifies the partly protected fauna and flora species. The EU Habitat Directive introduced for the first time the precautionary principle, permitting projects’ implementation only if no adverse effect on the integrity of the SAC was ascertained. Exceptions are allowed in extreme cases, for which compensation actions are 23 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 compulsory. The same precautionary and compensatory principles apply also to SPAs (http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/legislation/habitatsdirective/index-en.htm). With these two Directives, the EU delivers its obligations to international Conventions such as Ramsar, Bonn, Bern and CBD. Together, the SPAs and SACs form the Pan-European Ecological Network and Natura 2000, the ecological network which covers almost one fifth of the EU territory. The scope of the Natura 2000 is to preserve all the most biodiverse and unique European environments. The ecological connectivity is thus achieved with the protection of core areas, flyways, buffer zones, corridors and stepping stones within the Member States, for the implementation of Article 3 of the EU Bird Directive and Article 10 of the Habitat Directive on landscape connectivity. To protect species with international and/or intercontinental ranges, the ecological network expands to some non-EU European countries (e.g. Norway) and parts of North and Northwest Africa (i.e., Tunisia, Morocco, Senegal and Burkina Faso as Contracting Parties; Algeria, Cape Verde and Mauritania as observers) in what is called the Emerald Network. SAPs and the SACs become Areas of Special Conservation Interest (ASCI). The Emerald Network is organized similarly to Natura 2000, with the main difference being that it is not legally binding for its member countries (WWF 2009). Due to the limited coverage of the African continent, the Emerald Network can protect only short distance migrants, mainly waterbirds already covered by other conventions and agreements, such as Ramsar, AEWA, etc. (Council of Europe 2005, 2007). The ecological network approach of Natura 2000 and the Emerald Network has been very successful amongst the European governmental bodies since it simplifies the work of landscape planners and gives politicians an active role in the conservation effort, with consequential 24 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 positive publicity. The straightforward concepts of core areas, corridors and buffers are very attractive, especially in densely populated countries with different national and regional administrative legislations, but their effectiveness as conservation tools have yet to be proven. In this respect, the warnings of Boitani et al. (2007) are of the foremost importance. They point out the scientific weaknesses of the ecological network approach, and the danger of entrusting biodiversity conservation to professionals with no, or little, ecological backgrounds (i.e., landscape planners and politicians). They stress the necessity of tackling conservation, addressing the full complexity of ecosystems, enforcing specific codes of conduct and implementing adaptive management to the ever-evolving landscape and its wildlife. The Important Bird Areas (IBAs) IBAs are sites of global importance for biodiversity conservation in general, and bird conservation in particular. The IBA program was triggered by the requirement of the Bird Directive to identify SAPs. The sites are designated nationally according to four standardized, quantitatively- and scientifically-defendable criteria. These are the presence of: globally threatened species, restricted range species, biome-restricted species, or major congregations of individuals (BirdLife 2004, 2005). The program is articulated in four phases: “1 – Startup – Consultation, background context assessment, stakeholder analysis and establishment of national partnerships and agreements; setting up a suitable institutional framework, which usually involves obtaining the co-operation of non-BirdLife institutions such as government agencies, development NGOs, universities, etc. Agreeing national objectives; 25 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 2 – Identification/survey – A process of identifying potential IBA sites, data collection, field surveys, confirmation of these sites as IBAs, production of an IBA inventory and population of a database; 3 – Action planning – Setting priorities and implementing advocacy, monitoring and action for key sites; 4 – Fully-developed national site conservation program – Establishing a sustainable management cycle in which a program of action, monitoring and advocacy for the network of national IBAs is well-established, with security of future funding.” (from BirdLife International 2005) The IBA Program in Africa began in 1993 and covers now ca. 7% of the continent with 1,230 sites (Buchanan et al. 2009). Nearly 57% of the IBAs were already in areas covered by national or international formal protection at the launch of the program, while more than 50 IBAs have been granted legal protection since its launch. It has been speculated that most of the unprotected IBAs are located in areas presently unthreatened by direct human disturbance (Arinaitwe et al 2007). However, this affirmation might relate only to threats such as development or conversion to agriculture, not subsistence hunting. Many African IBAs are located in dry lands: for example in the Sahel biome there are 38, while an additional 73 are situated in the Somali-Maasai biome in East Africa (http://www.BirdLife.org/action/change/desertification/index.html). The effort of concentrating protection on specific sites known to host large numbers of specimens and taking marginal care of the overall matrix has limited effectiveness for almost 55% of the migratory birds, which rarely congregate in great numbers and are instead highly dispersed on a broad front. For these species, a wider form of protection, which takes care of the 26 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 broader landscape with a multidisciplinary approach, is the only effective means of conservation (Boitani et al. 2007; Kirby et al. 2008). Incidentally, the same approach is also required for most charismatic African fauna as the immense migratory herds of herbivores, ensuring wildlife movement in the erratic and constantly fluctuating environment of the sub-Saharan rangelands (Homewood 2004). Conversely, a serious drawback of some site specific conservation programs is called the “honey pot effect.” This refers to the drawing of immigrants to project areas in the hope of job opportunities, resulting in increased disturbance and a reduction in conservation efficacy (Brooks & Shokellu Thompson 2001). Finally, the effectiveness of IBAs for overall biodiversity conservation is a controversial issue in which Brooks et al. (2001) found 92% of amphibians and snakes and 97% of mammals endemic to the region thriving in the 228 protected IBAs of East Africa. Others studies, like the one of Lawton et al. (1998), found no correlation to the success of animals other than birds in other locations. The major threats to these areas and the birds they protect are the result of habitat destruction due to agriculture and deforestation, and the increasing human population disturbance. Human density is generally the same both inside and within the buffer areas of the IBAs, yet this density is three times above the average 27 individuals per square kilometer in the rest of sub-Saharan Africa. It is relevant to note that among the many threats to African IBAs reported in the formal assessment by Buchanan et al. (2009), the only reference to the threat of illegal bushmeat is “unspecified unsustainable exploitation”. This highlights the lack of involvement of the European Community south of North Africa and its dismissal of the overhunting potentially occurring in the area. 27 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 THE BUSHMEAT PHENOMENON IN THE AFRICAN RANGELANDS Bushmeat—from the West African French definition viande de brousse—is the meat of wild animals killed for food. They are often illegally hunted and consumed directly by the family of the hunter, and/or become the object of a mostly illegal and often unsustainable food trade which extends well beyond national and continental borders (Barnett 2000; anon. 2008; Nasi et al. 2008; Honan 2009; Opyene & Eves 2009). Its occurrence rose to international attention in the tropical forests, where it has caused widespread regional eradications and extinctions of species with low reproductive rates. The altered food-web, with the elimination of key seed-dispersers (e.g. most frugivore animals, the African forest elephant Loxodonta cyclotis, etc), is affecting plant recruitment, thus forests’ species composition and structure (Eves & Bakarr 2001; Moore 2001; Nasi et al. 2008). The phenomenon of forest degeneration due to bushmeat impact has been documented in various tropical regions, such as in Central and South America (Wright 2005; Nuñez-Iturri & Howe 2007; Wright et al. 2007). The crisis is driven by the absence and/or poor implementation of effective socioeconomic and environmental policies, international exploitation, poverty and human population increases (Nasi et al. 2008; Opyene & Eves 2009) as a result of inefficiently planned medical and social care, both at international and national levels. In the more productive African Rangelands, the factors influencing are similar. Low density hunter/gatherer societies have always relied on wildlife for their subsistence and, in the past, this was not perceived as a conservation issue. As a result of rising human population accompanied by widespread poverty and food insecurity, groups other than just traditional hunters are forced to exploit wildlife for mere subsistence, or as a source of income (Gelman 2009; Mwenja & Kariuki 2009; Opyene & Eves 2009). In many agro-pastoralist and pastoralist 28 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 tribes, like the Chewa in Malawi and the Samburu in Kenya, head of livestock are a capital and cultural asset, a symbol of wealth, especially cattle and camel (Sato1997; Loibooki et al. 2002). Livestock are rarely slaughtered for consumption, and bushmeat is seen as a viable and inexpensive alternative, preferred for its taste and nutritional value. Bushmeat, once a sustainable use of a natural resource by a smaller pool of people, has now transformed in a short-term, unsustainable palliative to poverty and hunger, due to the sheer increase in demand (MilnerGullanda & Bennett 2003). In some areas it is the main or only source of protein, but its unregulated overexploitation can undermine ecosystem services in the future (Milner-Gullanda & Bennett 2003; Amum & Eves 2009; Gelman 2009; Okello & Eves 2009; Opyene & Eves 2009). Within different scenarios, its use is pervasive in both urban and rural areas, with high or low human densities, large or impaired wildlife resource bases, in and outside of protected areas, and more often is unrelated to historic tribal customs (Ntiamoa-Baidu 1997; Barnett 2000; Loibooki et al. 2002; Caro & Andimile 2009; Gelman 2009). Bushmeat hunting is more overt during the dry season, when it is easier to locate game by the waterholes, and during wild herbivore migrations. A stronger reliance on bushmeat is observed at times of hardship, such as famine, war, drought, and for displaced refugees (Barnett 2000; Loibooki et al. 2002; Jambiya et al. 2007; Holmern et al. 2007; Mwenja & Eves 2009). East and Southern Africa The trade of bushmeat is an integral part of the struggling economies of many East and Southern African countries (Amum & Eves 2009; Damalu & Eves 2009; Okello & Eves 2009). This is prevalent in countries with a depleted wildlife resources base because the local population does 29 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 not have easy access to wild animals for their own hunting purposes. In these instances, neighboring countries with rich wildlife stocks act as sources. Trade as a source of income appears to be more common in Zambia, Mozambique, Malawi and Tanzania; while in Kenya, Zimbabwe and Botswana the mere subsistence use of bushmeat is prevalent. Nonetheless, poor subsistence farmers, such as in the Kilimanjaro region in Tanzania or in the Kitui district of Kenya, sell surplus bushmeat to generate income after their own families have been fed (Barnett 2000; Nielsen 2006). Very little information has been gathered on bushmeat use in Ethiopia, a largely rural country where struggling subsistence agriculture is still the most common activity (Degu 2007). Interestingly, southwest Ethiopia is a less known international destination for hunting safaris (see http://www.africahunting.com/hunting_ ethiopia.html; http://www.hunt-africa.com/ethiopiahunting-overview.php), with surprisingly rich wildlife stocks; and its central highlands are the non breeding range of some declining APMs (Fry et al 1982-2004: Engerman & Evangelista 2006). Most of the information available on Sudan concerns the southern area of the country (Amum & Eves 2009; Seme & Eves 2009; Thon Aleu 2009); while it appears that little research has been published on its northern Nile valley, plagued by decades of civil unrest. Like Ethiopia, Sudan is part of the important Eastern African flyway, and the non-breeding ground of some decreasing APMs (Fry et al. 1982-2004; Sanderson et al. 2006). The TRAFFIC study edited by Barnett (2000) reports that bushmeat trade in some countries has accounted for the single largest economic revenue generated by wildlife, as in Tanzania where it was estimated at 50 million USD. Conversely, in Malawi, bushmeat accounts for the largest national supply of meat. Surprisingly, this same study revealed that small animals, weighing less than five kilograms, including rodents, insects and birds were a significant part, 30 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 41.7%, of all traded and consumed bushmeat in East and Southern Africa. The frequent consumption of micro-fauna highlights the appreciation for the high nutritional value of these protein rich sources, underlines the constant bushmeat demand and the decline in availability of some large prey species (Barnett 2000, pages 25-26; Hoffman 2008). This constant demand is undermining local taboos and customs, enlarging the spectrum of hunted species, the age and gender of hunters and traders, and progressively expanding the hunting season, not leaving enough time for wildlife to recover (Barnett 2000; Andimile & Eves 2009; Opyene & Eves 2009). Overhunting pressure for bushmeat negatively impacts wildlife. This is obvious in some critical areas such as the Serengeti (Barnett 2000; Loibooki et al. 2002; Holmern et al. 2007; Caro & Andimile 2009; Opyene & Eves 2009; but see Mduma et al. 1999; Homewood 2004). In addition to the impact of bushmeat, some of the largest wildlife declines, such as the 50% decrease recorded in Kenya in the past three decades (Homewood 2004; Mwenja & Eves 2009), is also attributed to land use change and human encroachment into the rangelands. Fencing hampers the herds’ movement and disrupts the grassland mosaic vital to the survival of migratory herds and most African rangeland species (Barnett 2000; Homewood 2004; Okello & Kiringe 2004). The use of bushmeat usually accompanies human encroachment for cultural and socioeconomic reasons (Barnett 2000; Loibooki et al. 2002; Caro & Andimile 2009; Mwenja & Eves 2009). Although the bushmeat phenomenon varies from area to area, with local availability and culture, generally smaller birds are traded less frequently than mammals. Still, birds can contribute substantially to food security. In some regions, when mammal prey is no longer easily available, birds can become the largest component of consumed bushmeat (Barnett 2000; 31 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Nielsen 2006). In some circumstances the price paid for birds, as the traditional slit stick of small birds called mpani in Malawi, can actually be higher than top grade beef or other domestic meat (Barnett 2000). Sahel The combined action of: 1) climatic changes, long droughts and progressive desertification; 2) anthropogenic causes such as the expansion of intensive agriculture to meet the food demands of increasing human populations, competition by the rising livestock densities due to improved veterinary care and the relatively wetter conditions after the Great Drought of the mid 1960s, and hunting, have decimated the Sahelian wild ungulates and large birds. They are now reduced to sparse remnant populations (Wickens 1997; Wittig et al. 2007). Here, wildlife has also been exposed to over-hunting by Saudi Arabian aristocracy, which has been expanding its hunting grounds westward in the past decades, after having exterminated their quarry in North-East Africa (Newby 1990; Cloudsley-Thompson 1992). Birds become an important source of protein in areas where wild ungulates are scarce, with the larger species favored, if available (Thiollay 2006a, 2006b). Hunting has already caused the extinction or serious decline of many populations of Ostrich (Struthio camelus) and game birds such as guineafowls Numididae and bustards Otididae in most of Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger and other areas west of Chad where once they were abundant. Some of these birds do not meet the IUCN Red List criteria yet because they have very large ranges with many populations and/or subspecies. When they become scarce an increased hunting pressure targets small birds. Quantitative data on resident and migratory birds are still limited here as in most of the African continent (Mackworth-Praed & Grant 1957; Fry et al. 1982-2004; Youth 2002; Thiollay 2006a, 32 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 2006b; Magige et al. 2009; http://www.BirdLife.org/index.html). While information on desertification and sahelianization, pastoralism, agriculture and other socioeconomic issues in the Sudano-Sahelian countries is relatively plentiful, scant data has been gathered on the extent of bushmeat use and small bird hunting there, a critical area for most APMs (Jones et al. 1996, Fry et al. 1982-2004). DISCUSSION Bird hunting in sub-Saharan Africa may be more habitual than currently believed In many countries of the Middle East, North Africa and in most of the oases of the Sahara (e.g. Tunisia, Egypt), capturing small birds is a common occurrence, especially among boys (BirdLife International 2006). The prey are either lucratively sold as pets at the bird market or end up on the family table. Different techniques are used and various species are targeted, but one characteristic is common in this immense geographic area: the skill is praised and regarded as a desirable ability and is encouraged by the family. Being a good bird-catcher is a positive quality for young boys (BirdLife International 2006a) and echoes of such customs are still seen in Southern Europe, were it has been outlawed for decades. Notwithstanding a scarcity of data on the subject, young boys are also hunting small birds south of the Sahara. Among most hunter-gatherer people in East and Southern Africa, such as the Ikoma, Natta and Kuria, pursuing large game such as wild ungulates and Ostrich (Struthio camelus) is traditionally reserved for men. Before the passage from childhood to adulthood, boys practice on small birds (Magige et al. 2009). However, in areas depleted of resident wildlife, where bushmeat hunters can only target medium and large migratory ungulates seasonally, adult men also resort to bird hunting (Loibooki et al. 2002; Magige et al. 2009). Furthermore, in many 33 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 ethnic groups, small prey such as rodents, insects and birds are the only animals whose hunting and trade are traditionally open to women (Barnett 2000). Surprisingly, amid pastoralist communities such as the Kikuyu and Maasai, which are not typically associated with the consumptive use of wildlife, small bird hunting is a common activity for young shepherds/herders, even if large grassland species such as the Ostrich (Struthio camelus) are often ignored (Magige et al. 2009). Milk-subsistence pastoralism is fairly common in East Africa; its diet relies mainly on milk, blood, and the meat of small livestock and game. Meat is very rarely part of a formal meal, but is consumed during special events or for absolute necessity, when no milk is available due to adverse environmental conditions (Pratt et al. 1997). Conventional thinking holds that bushmeat is a fundamental integrative food in times of scarcity (Pratt et al. 1997, p.18); conversely, small prey is also consumed habitually as snack (Barnett 2000). This is relevant because the extent of bird consumption may not be fully recorded in some surveys since small birds are rarely traded in many regions, thus are not present in bushmeat markets, or consumed as part of a formal meal. Moving north into the rangelands of the Sahel, in a nutritional study carried out among nomad pastoralists, signs of protein energy malnutrition were identified in small children. These signs disappeared when the boys became old enough to accompany the herds on pasture, and to hunt birds (Benefice et al. 1984). Historically, pastoralism thrived, exploiting available resources in the open dry environments of the sub-Saharan rangeland. It was never a prosperous life, but moving continually to better pastures maintained a positive nutritional balance for livestock, people and the environment. The expansion of agricultural areas is limiting such movements in a landscape whose resources are already depleted by the effects of climate change, and by the overstocking 34 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 triggered by improved veterinary care (Sato 1997; Morris et al. 2008). Pastoralist people may be forced to rely more on bushmeat, often from birds. The research by Magige et al. (2009) in the Serengeti area of north Tanzania reveals that, in the majority of the villages covered by their study, bird hunting is a common occurrence. In western Serengeti 98.3% of the households regularly hunts small birds. The percentage drops only to 71.4% in the Maasai villages —traditionally a non hunting ethnic group—on the east of the park. Doves (Oena spp. and Streptopelia spp.) comprise 47.5% of the quarry, small game birds Phasianidae 20.4%, and weavers Ploceidae and other unidentified small songbirds 11.9%. Other recorded quarries are Ostrich, Helmeted Guineafowl (Numida meleagris), and some parrots Psittacidae. The most common weapon to hunt ostrich is the snare; small birds are captured with birdlime, an adhesive vegetable substance also used in North Africa and in East Mediterranean countries, slingshots, dogs, and others means (Magige et al. 2009). The widespread bird hunting within villages is of special concern considering the higher population density recorded on average in and around the majority of sub-Saharan IBAs, and future demographic projections. In the African rangelands, some species of omnivorous birds such as queleas (Quelea spp.) which feed on crops at harvest time, are considered vermin and culled in large numbers for crop protection, and then consumed. The practice is largely unregulated and commonly accepted. Even in Kenya, a country with strict wildlife protection laws, until recently Queleas culling did not require formal permission form the Wildlife Service (Barnett 2000, p.201); yet they are now routinely culled by the Ministry of Agriculture (E.M. Mwangi, personal communication). In other parts of Africa, lethal crop protection also targets various species of Guineafowls 35 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Numididae, spurfowls (Francolinus spp.) and other Phasianidae shortly after sowing, when these birds damage newly planted crops (see Hill 1997). Some of the declining APMs are small omnivores and farmland specialists in their breeding ranges, such as the Ortolan Bunting (Emberiza hortulana), and birds like the Common Quail and Corncrake which can easily be mistaken for small resident gamebirds since their nonbreeding ranges are in this area of East Africa and Sahel (Fry et al. 1982-2004). More research is needed to ascertain if lethal crop protection and pastoralist subsistence can be related to their declines. APM and the adaptability of the bushmeat phenomenon Before considering the environmental implications of bushmeat, it is important to remember the strong socioeconomic and cultural drivers. Culturally, people prefer bushmeat for its taste or because it is a traditional food (Mwenja & Kariuki 2009). Such preferences are well known for some species of large and medium herbivores of the rangelands, yet few references exist regarding the preference for birds (Barnett 2000). The lack of literature may be partially due to a bias toward the more charismatic species of the African rangelands, like the Cape buffalo (Syncerus caffer), wildebeest (Connochaetes spp.), impala (Aepyceros melampus), etc. Nevertheless, in some areas, birds and other small quarry are commonly consumed, especially where human encroachment has made the environment inhospitable for larger fauna (Barnett 2000; Nielsen 2006). Besides local availability, exploiting smaller prey may be induced by environmental laws not backed by effective socioeconomic policies. Where food is scarce, bird-catching, processing and consumption can be done covertly, thus lowering the risk of being penalized for poaching. In addition, birds can simply be preferred for a cost issue. Whichever the 36 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 reason, bushmeat is a staple of most African populations. In West Africa, various authors talk of “sustainable mature bushmeat markets”, where species with low reproductive rates have long been exterminated and replaced by prolific and highly adaptable generalist species able to thrive in simplified ecosystems, as duikers Cephalophinae and rodents (Cowlishaw et al. 2005). This highlights an important aspect: bushmeat demand does not wane with the changing of the prey offered; it is not just about taste and tradition, but necessity. Consequentially, the bushmeat phenomenon is highly adaptable. As aforementioned, the adaptability encompasses the species hunted, the age and gender of hunters, traders and consumers. This adaptability can take the most unexpected forms, such as the snaring of terns (Sterna spp.) on the beaches of Ghana and their trapping in Senegal, where these medium-small migratory seabirds are actually ‘fished’ using bait, hooks and nylon line. It is unclear if the practice was a consequence of the dwindling local fisheries but, with an estimated 10,000 birds captured annually in Senegal alone, tern trapping for food along the coast of West Africa is one of the major threats to their conservation (Stienen et al. 1998; BirdLife International 1999). Afro-Palearctic migratory birds have long been amongst the most hunted game in North Africa. Historically, they were important for the subsistence of large parts of the population; today their relevance, in this respect, has decreased locally (BirdLife International 2006, 2006a, 2006b). No information is available on the extent of bird hunting in Ethiopia and North Sudan but, even with the paucity of data, bird hunting appears to be a common occurrence in Sahel, East and Southern Africa. In areas with relatively high wild herbivore densities, birds appear to be killed opportunistically (Barnett 2000; Magige et al. 2009). In other regions, relying on wild birds for subsistence and trade takes place when large game has disappeared, as in Sahel, on the 37 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 growing agricultural areas along the Rift Valley in Kenya, in the Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania and in Southern and Central Malawi, among others (Youth 2002; Thiollay 2006a, 2006b; Wittig et al. 2007). While the most charismatic African wildlife, the continent’s natural heritage, attracts large attention, increasing pressure on smaller quarry may silently arise. Consider that: 1) 10% of African avifauna is Threatened and another 5% is Nearly Threatened (Githiru 2008), 2) the continent is the poorest region of the world with 40% of the population living below the poverty line, 3) its population will almost double by 2040 (UNEP 2003; UNDP 2008), and 4) bird hunting is common practice not only in north Africa and the Nile valley, but likely in most of sub-Saharan rangelands (Pero & Crowe 1996; Stienen et al. 1998; Barnett 2000; BirdLife International 2006, 2006a, 2006b, 2007; Thiollay 2006a, 2006b; Magige et al 2009). The probability is high that hunting pressure on birds may be underestimated. And this pressure can only increase in the future, with the pace of demography, poverty, conversion of the natural ecosystems, decrease of large game population and increased large game conservation enforcement. The majority of APMs are warblers and other small insectivores (Anthus spp., Oenanthe spp., Acrocephalus spp., Phylloscopus spp., etc.), which are easily impacted by environmental changes due to the aforementioned scarce adaptability. Their consumptive use in their nonbreeding range, for as little as it might be, is another negative driver which needs to be taken into consideration when drawing conservative measures in Europe (e.g., bag limits for the huntable species, designation of protected areas, SPAs, etc.). Bird-catching at migration times is a recognized traditional practice in North Africa and some Saharan oases (BirdLife International 2006b). Most human populations of both the Sahara 38 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 and Sahel are nomadic. Thus, inhabitants of the Sahel, who traditionally did not exploit APMs in the past, might learn the practice through periodic intercultural contacts, and begin taking advantage of this food source. Some species, such as the European Turtle Dove which congregates here in large numbers at drinking holes every evening (Fry et al. 1982-2004), might be easily hunted during all the non-breeding season. Other species, such as the Corncrake and the Common Quail, have large parts of their non-breeding ranges in East and Southern Africa where bushmeat is a recognized problem (see http://www.bushmeatnetwork.org/), and in areas where they may be targeted by lethal crop protection. The direct threat of hunting pressure on APM birds cannot be estimated by a desk study alone. It would require greater knowledge of migratory bird ecology in Africa than what is available today, including the likelihood of APM flocking and/or foraging with other resident species outside the reproductive season, and a better knowledge of the dietary habits and evolution of hundreds of different cultures dispersed on a huge territory. The indirect threat of ecosystem disturbance The energy flow through the food web shapes the various trophic levels of most ecosystems. This is also the case in the highly interactive African rangelands. The various herbivores influence the plant community in different ways. In oversimplified terms, elephants reduce the density of large trees, small antelopes tend to prefer high quality plant tissue, and the large migratory ungulates (e.g., blue wildebeest C. taurinus) graze on more abundant but less nutrient forage. This diverse and balanced community of grazers, browsers, generalists, specialists and megaherbivores has a major role in maintaining the balance of trees, shrubs and grasses, and their species composition. 39 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 Plant communities are also naturally impacted by abiotic conditions such as the local pedology, fire and precipitations, but as HilleRisLambers et al. (2001) discovered, “the main driver behind lawn formation in our study— the east African grassland/savannah, the dry open environment vital for so many declining APM birds—was grazing in interaction with increased soil fertility”. A positive relationship has been discovered between the stability of plant functional properties and the community species diversity. The optimum biodiversity level is linked to greater biomass stability throughout the different seasons, and greater resilience after disturbance. The ecologies of both flora and fauna in the African rangelands are strongly related and interdependent (McNaughton 1983; McNaughton 1985; McNaughton et al. 1988; HilleRisLambers et al. 2001; Archibald et al. 2005; Cromsigt & Olff 2008). It is therefore reasonable to foresee that wild ungulate declines due to bushmeat and landscape disturbance will cause changes in the structures and composition of plant communities. The alteration of vegetative structure caused by temporary pastoralist settlements is associated with the presence of different game birds where the most disturbed ecosystems are always characterized by reduced bird species diversity (Morris et al. 2008). Thus, it can reasonably be assumed that future environmental changes caused by declining wild ungulate populations will have an indirect impact on the APM species which use the same territory during the non-breeding season. Considering the low level of adaptability of long-distance migratory birds and the non-optimal fitness due to habitat loss or disturbance in non-breeding sites both of which affect breeding success in Europe (Drent & Daan 1980; Norris et al. 2004; Sol et al. 2005; Schultz et al. 2005; Norris & Marra 2007), the indirect effect of bushmeat may have strong consequences on APM conservation success. 40 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 CONCLUSION Is the bushmeat phenomenon in the sub-Saharan rangelands a significant driver behind the decline of so many long-distance European migratory birds? This is a complex question which, at present, has no definitive answer. According to the Bonn, Bern, and CBD Conventions, the EU has the responsibility to ensure that all the species thrive within its territory, paying particular attention to those of global concern which have an Unfavorable Conservation Status within the EU25. In a world plagued by rising extinction rates, waiting for the formal criteria of the IUCN Red List to be met seems a dangerous gamble. Given limited financial resources this gamble, at times, is unavoidable; but for wide-ranging and highly dispersed species whose ecologies are still partially unknown, the precautionary principle of proactive protection seems the wisest choice. This is the case for all APMs. The Annex V of the EU Birds Directive (79/409/EEC) clearly dictates all Signatory Members to undertake “listing and ecological description of areas particularly important to migratory species on their migratory routes and as wintering and nesting grounds” and “assessing the influence of methods of taking wild birds on population levels”. This, for longdistance migrants, is clearly not feasible if research is limited to EU territories or even EU territories plus those few countries involved in the Emerald Network program and the Regional Action Plan for moving towards responsible hunting & conservation of migratory birds in the southern and eastern Mediterranean regions. It is impossible to secure the Favorable Conservation Status of any species if its ecology is not thoroughly understood, as amply suggested by the existing literature; especially in a world 41 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 stressed by anthropic and climatic pressures, and when dealing with relatively non-adaptable animals. Ecological data regarding many APMs, while in the African continent, are often too scarce to assess local threats, population dynamics and thus formulate effective conservation policies in any part of their global range. More research is needed for all these species. This research would benefit from a multidisciplinary approach. Besides the obvious ornithological studies to fill in present knowledge gaps, detailed data on the consumptive use of wildlife is needed for the countries of the Sahelian strip, and especially Sudan and Ethiopia which are also part of the East African Flyway. The studies carried out in the Sahel concentrate mainly on anthropological, demographic, political, socioeconomic, agricultural, climatic, and botanical issues, and on some endemic threatened fauna. Given the importance of this region as non-breeding range and staging area for most APMs, a better picture of which species are hunted for human consumption, hunting seasonality, timing and techniques, etc, would help both African and European biodiversity conservation. This better picture is secured by ongoing studies which follow the evolution of new survival techniques derived by shifting environmental conditions. In East and Southern Africa, where the bushmeat phenomenon has received more attention, further information on small bird quarries is needed, notwithstanding their minute percentage in some locations or seasons. Most of the available literature gives exhaustive species lists for mammal prey, but mentions avian prey simply as birds, with the exception of Ostrich and Guineafowl. Even studies focusing on avian prey are often limited to the genus or the family, which are clearly not sufficient to assess the consumptive use of APMs. Building local capacity, as already supported by local institutions and international organizations, may be a better tool to 42 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 understand coveted consumptive use of wildlife, be it for food, trade or crop protection. Better knowledge is vital to assess unknown threats, and to prevent global biodiversity loss. Sound socioeconomic alternatives and education strategies have been identified as fundamental for APM conservation in the North African and East Mediterranean countries. An example is the recent Regional Action Plan for moving towards responsible hunting & conservation of migratory birds in the southern and eastern Mediterranean regions (2008-2013) (BirdLife International 2006, 2007). Such endeavors are admirable and indeed helpful but will have limited impact so long as EU efforts and funding for conservation interventions do not cover the full flyway of long-distance migrants. Most Africans countries can hardly fund these projects on their own. International conventions such as the CBD and CITES, of which most countries are signatories, constitute the framework for formal environmental policies in sub-Saharan Africa. Nevertheless, the political will and material means to enforce such policies may be lacking; national agendas frequently deviate from international agreements due to poverty, civil unrest and corruption. Biodiversity conservation in Africa is still dependant on non-governmental organizations, international support and private philanthropists whose goals are not always in sync with each other; the availability and continuity of conservation efforts is often dictated more by economic and politic factors than ecological ones (Homewood 2004; Githiru 2008). Since successful conservation relies also on continuity, it is of the utmost importance that appropriate socio-economic alternatives and policies, alongside site-specific environmental policies, should be envisaged and implemented in Africa on the totality of their ranges. 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SPECIES SCIENTIFIC NAME TREND 70-90 TREND 90-00 HABITAT Manx Shearwater Little Bittern Black-crowned Night-heron Squacco Heron Purple Heron Black Stork White Stork Glossy Ibis Garganey European Honey-buzzard Black Kite Egyptian Vulture Short-toed Snake-eagle Pallid Harrier Montagu’s Harrier Levant Sparrowhawk Lesser Spotted Eagle Booted Eagle Osprey Lesser Kestrel Red-footed Falcon Eurasian Hobby Eleonora’s Falcon Common Quail Spotted Crake Little Crake Baillon’s Crake Corncrake Black-winged Stilt Collared Pratincole Black-winged Pratincole Little Ringed Plover Temminck’s Stint Ruff Great Snipe Whimbrel Puffinus puffinus Ixobrychus minutus Nycticorax nycticorax Ardeola ralloides Ardea purpurea Ciconia nigra Ciconia ciconia Plegadis falcinellus Anas querquedula Pernis apivorus Milvus migrans Neophron percnopterus Circaetus gallicus Circus macrourus Circus pygargus Accipiter brevipes Aquila pomarina Hieraaetus pennatus Pandion haliaetus Falco naumanni Falco vespertinus Falco subbuteo Falco eleonorae Coturnix coturnix Porzana porzana Porzana parva Porzana pusilla Crex crex Himantopus himantopus Glareola pratincola Glareola nordmanni Charadrius dubius Calidris temminckii Philomachus pugnax Gallinago media Numenius phaeopus -2.156 -0.5079 -0.2545 -0.7657 -0.813 0.9107 -0.3525 -0.7779 -0.5034 0.06443 -0.4111 -0.7453 0.1575 -0.7694 0.998 0.3048 -0.0132 0.003484 0.4035 -1.5852 -1.6887 0.1373 -0.2842 -0.9198 -0.4592 -1.0135 -0.8343 -1.3258 -0.2554 -0.9945 0.2249 0.09126 -0.6903 -0.7423 -1.7035 0.6249 1.3417 0.2665 0.446 -0.09572 0.4015 0.6203 1.3792 -0.03948 -0.9911 0.2757 -0.826 -1.9923 0.2788 -1.8983 1.3545 -2.8086 0.0658 0.8936 0.733 -0.106 -2.7095 0.5957 -0.5737 -0.2134 -0.381 -0.6636 -0.259 0.005623 1.0854 -0.9148 -4.1868 -0.1881 -2.6938 -0.7423 -2.0528 -0.5715 C W, C W, C C, W C W, D D W C, W F A D D, F D D n/a F F, D C D D F D D W W W D, W W, C D D W W W, D W C 56 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 SPECIES SCIENTIFIC NAME TREND 70-90 TREND 90-00 HABITAT Marsh Sandpiper Common Greenshank Green Sandpiper Wood Sandpiper Common Sandpiper Red-necked Phalarope Gull-billed Tern Caspian Tern Sandwich Tern Roseate Tern Common Tern Arctic Tern Little Tern Whiskered Tern Black Tern White-winged Tern European Turtle-dove Great Spotted Cuckoo Common Cuckoo Common Scops-owl Eurasian Nightjar Common Swift Pallid Swift Alpine Swift European Bee-eater European Roller Eurasian Hoopoe Eurasian Wryneck Greater Short-toed Lark Sand Martin Barn Swallow Red-rumped Swallow Northern House-martin Tawny Pipit Tree Pipit Yellow Wagtail Citrine Wagtail Rufous-tailed Scrub-robin Thrush Nightingale Common Nightingale Bluethroat Common Redstart Whinchat Northern Wheatear Pied Wheateart Tringa stagnatilis Tringa nebularia Tringa ochropus Tringa glareola Tringa hypoleucos Phalaropus lobatus Sterna nilotica Sterna caspia Sterna sandvicensis Sterna dougallii Sterna hirundo Sterna paradisaea Sterna albifrons Chlidonias hybridus Chlidonias niger Chlidonias leucopterus Streptopelia turtur Clamator glandarius Cuculus canorus Otus scops Caprimulgus europaeus Apus apus Apus pallidus Tachymarptis melba Merops apiaster Coracias garrulus Upupa epops Jynx torquilla Calandrella brachydactyla Riparia riparia Hirundo rustica Hirundo daurica Delichon urbica Anthus campestris Anthus trivialis Motacilla flava Motacilla citreola Cercotrichas galactotes Luscinia luscinia Luscinia megarhynchos Luscinia svecica Phoenicurus phoenicurus Saxicola rubetra Oenanthe oenanthe Oenanthe pleschanka 0.03977 -0.07458 0.6958 -0.9988 -0.1402 -0.5796 -0.3021 -0.9493 0.2574 -1.4144 0.1983 -0.09274 -0.3572 0.4556 -0.7352 0.9712 -0.8318 -0.7161 -0.2855 0.1474 -1.0503 -0.4171 0.7247 0.4626 -0.1852 -1.8521 -0.5903 -0.7337 -0.6652 -0.5883 -0.7516 1.0224 -0.2473 -0.1231 -0.1103 0.03798 1.4884 0.335 0.3126 0.08911 0.223 -0.5789 -0.3274 -0.1385 -0.7952 -2.1768 1.3109 1.4162 0.1621 -0.4973 -0.6988 -0.7054 1.2128 0.1942 1.1509 0.3525 0.03333 -0.9857 1.0933 -0.4491 0.1683 -2.1688 0.3221 -0.3613 0.5864 -0.1571 -0.5213 1.7036 0.6062 0.731 -1.8521 -0.5489 -0.5967 -2.1494 -0.2181 -0.4956 0.7101 -0.5979 -0.1086 -0.5753 -0.4064 1.9908 -0.248 0.3781 -0.3907 0.4343 1.3943 -0.07723 -0.736 1.002 C W, C W, C W — C C C C C C C C W C W D D D, F D, F F, D A A A D D F F, D D D, W A D A D F D, W — D D, W D, F W D, F D, W D F, D 57 Carlo Contesso 905352005 Project & Report NR 5904 – Draft #2 Summer 2009 SPECIES SCIENTIFIC NAME TREND 70-90 TREND 90-00 HABITAT Black-eared Wheatear Rufous-tailed Rock-thrush Common Grasshopperwarbler Eurasian River Warbler Savi’s Warbler Aquatic Warbler Sedge Warbler Oenanthe hispanica Monticola saxatilis Locustella naevia -0.6606 -0.4625 0.2824 -0.292 -0.2722 0.9293 D — D, F, W Locustella fluviatilis Locustella luscinioides Acrocephalus paludicola Acrocephalus schoenobaenus Acrocephalus agricola Acrocephalus dumetorum Acrocephalus palustris Acrocephalus scirpaceus Acrocephalus arundinaceus Hippolais pallida Hippolais olivetorum Hippolais icterina Hippolais polyglotta Sylvia cantillans Sylvia hortensis Sylvia nisoria Sylvia curruca Sylvia communis Sylvia borin Phylloscopus trochiloides Phylloscopus bonelli Phylloscopus sibilatrix Phylloscopus trochilus Muscicapa striata Ficedula parva Ficedula semitorquata Ficedula albicollis Ficedula hypoleuca Oriolus oriolus Lanius collurio Lanius minor Lanius senator Sturnus roseus Carpodacus erythrinus Emberiza hortulana Emberiza rustica Emberiza melanocephala -0.1756 0.06098 -1.0841 -0.06113 0.07569 0.09437 -0.1682 0.1269 D, W W W W 1.0398 1.4932 -0.02513 0.1704 -0.04181 1.2914 -0.1887 0.0267 1.0842 0.08994 — n/a W, D D, W W, D 0.2764 n/a 0.3052 2.0035 0.001629 0.04958 -0.2658 -0.3302 -0.1949 0.3044 0.6556 -0.1075 -0.01215 0.1503 -0.6295 -0.148 n/a 0.07019 0.4472 -0.2615 -0.4126 -0.8838 -0.6653 -1.5116 0.945 -0.295 -1.1374 0.2245 0.3029 0.7096 0.05624 -0.6474 -0.6362 5.1896 0.4955 0.1353 1.0544 0.1523 0.2691 -2.8285 -0.458 -0.4043 -0.1607 0.0768 -0.4984 0.5737 -0.3223 -0.3652 0.3799 -0.2152 0.4924 -0.1904 -0.7504 -0.583 -2.6949 2.583 D, F D, F D F, D D D, F D D D F — D — F, D, W F, D — F F, W F F D D D — — D — — Paddyfield Warbler Blyth’s Reed-warbler Marsh Warbler Eurasian Reed-warbler Great Reed-warbler Olivaceous Warbler Olive-tree Warbler Icterine Warbler Melodious Warbler Subalpine Warbler Orphean Warbler Barred Warbler Lesser Whitethroat Common Whitethroat Garden Warbler Greenish Warbler Bonelli’s Warbler Wood Warbler Willow Warbler Spotted Flycatcher Red-breasted Flycatcher Semi-collared Flycatcher Collared Flycatcher European Pied Flycatcher Eurasian Golden-oriole Red-backed Shrike Lesser Grey Shrike Woodchat Shrike Rosy Starling Common Rosefinch Ortolan Bunting Rustic Bunting Black-headed Bunting 58