Birds in Europe 4: the fourth assessment of Species of European Conservation Concern

IF 1.5 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Bird Conservation International Pub Date : 2023-06-30 DOI:10.1017/S0959270923000187
I. Burfield, Claire A. Rutherford, Eresha Fernando, Hannah Grice, Alex Piggott, Rob W. Martin, Mark Balman, M. Evans, Anna Staneva
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Summary This is the fourth comprehensive assessment of the population status of all wild bird species in Europe. It identifies Species of European Conservation Concern (SPECs) so that action can be taken to improve their status. Species are categorised according to their global extinction risk, the size and trend of their European population and range, and Europe’s global responsibility for them. Of the 546 species assessed, 207 (38%) are SPECs: 74 (14%) of global concern (SPEC 1); 32 (6%) of European concern and concentrated in Europe (SPEC 2); and 101 (18%) of European concern but not concentrated in Europe (SPEC 3). The proportion of SPECs has remained similar (38–43%) across all four assessments since 1994, but the number of SPEC 1 species of global concern has trebled. The 44 species assessed as Non-SPECs in the third assessment (2017) but as SPECs here include multiple waders, raptors and passerines that breed in arctic, boreal or alpine regions, highlighting the growing importance of northern Europe and mountain ecosystems for bird conservation. Conversely, the 62 species assessed as SPECs in 2017 but as Non-SPECs here include various large waterbirds and raptors that are recovering due to conservation action. Since 1994, the number of specially protected species (listed on Annex I of the EU Birds Directive) qualifying as SPECs has fallen by 33%, while the number of huntable (Annex II) species qualifying as SPECs has risen by 56%. The broad patterns identified previously remain evident: 100 species have been classified as SPECs in all four assessments, including numerous farmland and steppe birds, ducks, waders, raptors, seabirds and long-distance migrants. Many of their populations are heavily depleted or continue to decline and/or contract in range. Europe still holds 3.4–5.4 billion breeding birds, but more action to halt and reverse losses is needed.
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欧洲鸟类4:欧洲保护关注物种第四次评估
这是对欧洲所有野生鸟类种群状况的第四次全面评估。它确定了欧洲保护关注物种(SPECs),以便采取行动改善其地位。物种根据其全球灭绝风险、欧洲种群和范围的规模和趋势以及欧洲对它们的全球责任进行分类。在评估的546个物种中,207个(38%)是SPEC:74个(14%)是全球关注的物种(SPEC 1);欧洲关注的32个(6%),集中在欧洲(SPEC 2);101(18%)是欧洲关注的问题,但不集中在欧洲(SPEC 3)。自1994年以来,在所有四项评估中,SPEC的比例保持相似(38-43%),但全球关注的SPEC 1物种数量增加了两倍。在第三次评估(2017年)中,44个物种被评估为非SPEC,但此处的SPEC包括在北极、北方或高山地区繁殖的多种涉禽、猛禽和雀形目,这突出了北欧和山区生态系统对鸟类保护日益重要。相反,2017年被评估为SPEC但此处被评估为非SPEC的62种物种包括由于保护行动而正在恢复的各种大型水禽和猛禽。自1994年以来,符合SPEC资格的特别保护物种(列于欧盟鸟类指令附件一)数量下降了33%,而符合SPEC的可狩猎物种(附件二)数量上升了56%。之前确定的广泛模式仍然很明显:在所有四项评估中,有100个物种被归类为SPEC,包括许多农田和草原鸟类、鸭子、涉禽、猛禽、海鸟和长途迁徙者。它们的许多种群已经严重枯竭或继续减少和/或缩小范围。欧洲仍有34-54亿只繁殖鸟类,但需要采取更多行动来阻止和扭转损失。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
50
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Bird Conservation International is a quarterly peer-reviewed journal that seeks to promote worldwide research and action for the conservation of birds and the habitats upon which they depend. The official journal of BirdLife International, it provides stimulating, international and up-to-date coverage of a broad range of conservation topics, using birds to illuminate wider issues of biodiversity, conservation and sustainable resource use. It publishes original papers and reviews, including targeted articles and recommendations by leading experts.
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