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  4. Enhancing monitoring and transboundary collaboration for conserving migratory species under global change: The priority case of the red kite
 
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Enhancing monitoring and transboundary collaboration for conserving migratory species under global change: The priority case of the red kite

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2022
Author
Mattsson, Brady J.
Mateo-Tomás, Patricia
Aebischer, Adrian
Rösner, Sascha
Kunz, Florian
Schöll, Eva M.
Åkesson, Susanne
De Rosa, Davide
Orr-Ewing, Duncan
Bodega, David de la
Ferrer, Miguel
Gelpke, Christian
Katzenberger, Jakob
Maciorowski, Grzegorz 
Mammen, Ubbo
Kolbe, Martin
Millon, Alexandre
Mionnet, Aymeric
Puente, Javier de la
Raab, Rainer
Vyhnal, Stanislav
Ceccolini, Guido
Godino, Alfonso
Crespo-Luengo, Gabriela
Sanchez-Agudo, Jose Angel
Martínez, Juan
Iglesias-Lebrija, Juan J.
Ginés, Ester
Cortés, Maria
Deán, Juan I.
Calmaestra, Ricardo Gómez
Dostál, Marek
Steinborn, Eike
Viñuela, Javier
Faculty
Wydział Leśny i Technologii Drewna
Journal
Journal of Environmental Management
ISSN
0301-4797
DOI
10.1016/j.jenvman.2022.115345
Web address
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301479722009185#!
Volume
317
Number
1 September 2022
Pages from-to
art. 115345
Abstract (EN)
Calls for urgent action to conserve biodiversity under global change are increasing, and conservation of migratory species in this context poses special challenges. In the last two decades the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) has provided a framework for several subsidiary instruments including action plans for migratory bird species, but the effectiveness and transferability of these plans remain unclear. Such laws and policies have been credited with positive outcomes for the conservation of migratory species, but the lack of international coordination and on-ground implementation pose major challenges. While research on migratory populations has received growing attention, considerably less emphasis has been given to integrating ecological information throughout the annual cycle for examining strategies to conserve migratory species at multiple scales in the face of global change. We fill this gap through a case study examining the ecological status and conservation of a migratory raptor and facultative scavenger, the red kite (Milvus milvus), whose current breeding range is limited to Europe and is associated with agricultural landscapes and restricted to the temperate zone. Based on our review, conservation actions have been successful at recovering red kite populations within certain regions. Populations however remain depleted along the southern-most edge of the geographic range where many migratory red kites from northern strongholds overwinter. This led us to a forward-looking and integrated strategy that emphasizes international coordination involving researchers and conservation practitioners to enhance the science-policy-action interface. We identify and explore key issues for conserving the red kite under global change, including enhancing conservation actions within and outside protected areas, recovering depleted populations, accounting for climate change, and transboundary coordination in adaptive conservation and management actions. The integrated conservation strategy is sufficiently general such that it can be adapted to inform conservation of other highly mobile species subject to global change.
Keywords (EN)
  • agricultural intensification

  • anthropogenic mortality

  • climate change

  • conservation strategy

  • migratory bird

  • full annual cycle

License
cc-by-nccc-by-nc CC-BY-NC - Attribution-NonCommercial
Open access date
May 26, 2022
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