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Saving two adult eagles per year to save the population of this endangered species

Date:
September 29, 2016
Source:
Universidad de Barcelona
Summary:
Dying due to electrocution at the power lines is the most common death for Bonelli’s eagle (Aquila fasciata), a threatened species in Europe. New work shows a statistic model to evaluate the impact of electrocution deaths in Bonelli's eagle in Catalonia, and quantifies which mitigation actions would be necessary to preserve the eagle population in different areas.
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Dying due to electrocution at the power lines is the most common death for Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata), a threatened species in Europe. This is the case of a ringed bird in 2008 -- the baby bird 0M -- in Montserrat Mountain (Barcelona, Spain), that died due to electrocution in 2014 in a place with high density of power lines in a place in Penedès where the baby lived. Electrocution was the same death cause for another ringed eagle -- baby bird CD -- in Vallès mountains in 2013 and found dead in 2015 at the bottom of an electric tower in Empordà (Girona, Spain).

These are only two examples of the 92 Bonelli's eagles that died due to electrocution in Catalonia from 1990 to 2014, a problem that has big effects on birds around the world. In other parts of the peninsula, this affects other species with great ecological value, such as the Spanish imperial eagle (Aquila adalberti), and another of the most threatened species around the world. In the United States, one of the most affected species is the American bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), considered to be the national symbol of a country where there are around 12 and 64 million bird deaths due to power lines (around 11 million electrocutions).

Power lines: bird death traps

"Saving two adult birds or four young eagles per year would be enough so that Bonelli's eagle population stabilized. In order to do so, the most efficient action would be to join preservation efforts to correct some electric towers, which are black spots for the birds," says Joan Real, Director of the Conservation Biology Group linked to the Department of Evolutionary Biology, Ecology and Environmental Sciences and the Biodiversity Research Institute of the University of Barcelona (IRBio), and one of the authors of a new article published in the journal Biological Conservation, together with Antonio Hernández Matías (first author of the article) and Francesc Parés (UB and IRBio), and Roger Pradel (University of Montpellier).

This work shows a statistic model to evaluate the impact of electrocution deaths in Bonelli's eagle in Catalonia and quantifies which mitigation actions would be necessary to preserve the eagle population in different areas. "Regarding preservation, the new model will allow managers calculating the needed mitigation effort to guarantee the population viability of these birds" says the researcher Antonio Hernández Matías, member of the Conservation Biology Group of the University of Barcelona.

Stopping adult bird deaths is a more efficient strategy

Increasing the number of baby birds is a classic strategy in order to preserve Bonelli's eagle. For example, moving baby birds that would probably die to other nests is a positive task but not the most efficient one regarding the preservation of its population. Identifying the priority measures to be promoted is the key factor when facing the challenge of Bonelli's eagle preservation.

"One first step, for example, would be to decide if protection or mitigation measures are centered on adult or young population, which use separated areas in lots of territory species" says Joan Real, who since 1980 led a reference Group on research of the Bonelli's eagle ecology and finding solutions to improve its preservation.

"The new statistic model as well as other researches carried out during the last years -continues Real- shows that stopping adult deaths is 10 times more efficient demographically than trying to make baby birds fly. This information is very important for the conservation managers because it allows them being more effective and optimizing their means."

Saving eagle population decrease with a new statistic model

Most of Bonelli's eagle population -between 920 and 1100 couples- is in the Iberian Peninsula. This species, threatened in all Europe, reduced its number dramatically over the last decades. Catalonia is not an exception regarding this general tendency.

In the nineties there were around a hundred couples and they got reduced to 60 in 2000. However, the population has stabilized now and there is some colonization in some territories. Nevertheless, in the North-West sector and center of the Peninsula, the situation is alarming for some populations and they are in danger of disappearing.

Most of the deaths are caused by power lines and human hunting. "To understand how human activity causes demographic decrease in endangered species is essential to establish the priorities in preservation actions," says Joan Real. To assess the mortality impact due electrocution in the populations, the authors designed a new statistic model that brings warning information on ringed eagles by experts with demographic data about the studied populations from 1990 to 2014.

"The new statistic model -says Antonio Hernández- allows adding information on monitoring and multievent models of hunting and warning, so it was possible to estimate death probability due specific causes as well as probability of finding a dead individual for the same reason. In this sense, it was estimated that it is three times more probable to find dead individuals due electrocution than other causes, and the probability of finding dead individuals for electrocution was of 62% in non-territorial individuals and 26% in territorial individuals."

Putting efforts together to correct the most dangerous power towers

Once the electrocution impact was known, it was applied on a demographic model based on the monitoring of the population in Catalonia driven by the Conservation Biology Group of the UB during the last decades. As a final result, they could prove that reduce bird electrocution would guarantee the viability of bird population, a topic which had some controversy due the lack of quantitative analysis"

"As a consequence, they could estimate what correction efforts on electric support would be necessary so that the Catalan population would be stable, since during the last decades it has had a risky behavior in European populations of the species," said Joan Real. The new work obtained the support of the company ENDESA, the Swiss foundation MAVA, the Spanish Government, Diputació de Barcelona and Miquel Torres Foundation, from Vilafranca del Penedès.

A protocol against electrocution points in Catalonia

The UB and IRBio group also designed a protocol to mitigate efficiently the bird electrocution problem. With the technical characteristics of the electric supports and their position one predictive model developed by the researchers, allows identifying the most dangerous towers and focusing the correction effort on black spots, the ones that have more electrocutions. This procedure allows optimizing -in more than a 70%- the resources dedicated to the correction (money and time), and having positive effects on the eagles. "The pioneer test of this initiative was undergone in Parc Natural de Sant Llorenç del Munt and it allowed reducing eagle mortality from a 23 to a 0% in the last years," says the researcher.

"However, it is quite worrying that although having an accurate legislation from the Spanish and the Catalan governments for more than 10 years, in Catalonia there are no power lines corrected yet and thousands of birds die electrocuted every day. For the eagles, this is one of the worst impacts for the survival of the populations" says Joan Real. The Conservation Biology Group of the UB is also author of the project "The Viability of the Population of Bonelli's Eagle in Catalonia: Guidelines for Conservation," the first scientific report that presents guidelines to preserve this endangered species in Europe.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Universidad de Barcelona. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Antonio Hernández-Matías, Joan Real, Francesc Parés, Roger Pradel. Electrocution threatens the viability of populations of the endangered Bonelli's eagle (Aquila fasciata) in Southern Europe. Biological Conservation, 2015; 191: 110 DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2015.06.028

Cite This Page:

Universidad de Barcelona. "Saving two adult eagles per year to save the population of this endangered species." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 29 September 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160929082310.htm>.
Universidad de Barcelona. (2016, September 29). Saving two adult eagles per year to save the population of this endangered species. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 18, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160929082310.htm
Universidad de Barcelona. "Saving two adult eagles per year to save the population of this endangered species." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/09/160929082310.htm (accessed March 18, 2024).

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