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    Home»Biology»New Findings Reveal That Europe’s Nature Is in “Dire Straits”
    Biology

    New Findings Reveal That Europe’s Nature Is in “Dire Straits”

    By Cambridge University PressOctober 5, 2023No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Birds Migrating
    A recent study emphasizes the urgency to adopt comprehensive restoration legislation, highlighting that the number of bird species of global concern has tripled since 1994. Despite some species improving due to conservation action, the research underscores the need for EU nations to ramp up efforts to reverse the decline in threatened bird populations, particularly given recent political debates and resistance.

    Nearly four in 10 of Europe’s bird species are now of conservation concern, with 14% being of global concern, according to researchers, who say the continent’s nature is in dire straits.

    The findings were recently published in the peer-reviewed journal Bird Conservation International, published, by Cambridge University Press, on behalf of BirdLife International.  

    It comes after the European Parliament voted in favor of the hotly-contested Nature Restoration Law and the EU Green Deal to legally oblige the 27 EU countries to restore nature on land and at sea. Birdlife International described ‘unprecedented disinformation campaign’ aiming to prevent the law, ‘led by conservative and right-wing politicians and agriculture and fisheries lobbies’. The legislation narrowly passed in the European Parliament but the draft law will not impose new protected areas in the EU.

    Against this backdrop, the article underlines an urgent need to adopt comprehensive restoration legislation and provides clear priorities to help guide national restoration plans to stop the decline in threatened bird species, which include farmland and steppe birds, ducks, waders, raptors, seabirds, and long-distance migrants

    BirdLife International has produced three previous assessments of the population status of all naturally occurring wild bird species in Europe: in 1994, 2004, and 2017. Of the 546 species assessed in the latest 2023 study, 207 (38%) qualify as Species of European Conservation Concern (SPECs).  

    The number and proportion of species of global concern has trebled, from 24 (5%) in 1994 to 74 (14%) in 2023. The researchers say this shows that threats have increased and intensified, with iconic birds such as the Atlantic Puffin Fratercula arctica and the European Turtle-dove Streptopelia turtur having become species of global conservation concern in recent years.  

    Hotspots for Bird Conservation Across Europe

    The overall proportion of SPECs has remained similar across all four assessments, from 38 to 43%. SPECs are distributed throughout Europe, and every country shares some responsibility for conserving them. Several regions hold particularly high numbers of SPECs, including parts of Iberia, Türkiye, the Caucasus, and European Russia, as well as various coastal areas – indicating ‘hotspots’ for bird conservation. 

    The authors said “It is clear that Europe’s nature is in dire straits, many habitat specialists are among the species with a deteriorating status, showing the importance of habitat restoration. Europe still holds between 3.4 and 5.4 billion breeding birds, but more action to halt and reverse losses is needed. This action must now be implemented at scale and pace, to halt and reverse the loss of Europe’s birds and meet regional and global restoration targets.”

    “Species that have seen their status improve include various large waterbirds and raptors, which are recovering due to conservation action. This is a vindication of the positive impact of the implementation of EU nature legislation.” 

    Reference: “Birds in Europe 4: the fourth assessment of Species of European Conservation Concern” by Ian J. Burfield, Claire A. Rutherford, Eresha Fernando, Hannah Grice, Alexa Piggott, Rob W. Martin, Mark Balman, Michael I. Evans and Anna Staneva, 30 June 2023, Bird Conservation International.
    DOI: 10.1017/S0959270923000187

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    Birds Cambridge University Press Conservation Europe
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