Birds' Decline Shows Wider Damage to Nature - Study

Alister Doyle, PlanetArk 10 Oct 08;

BARCELONA, Spain - Dwindling numbers of birds worldwide are a sign that governments are failing to keep promises to slow damage to nature by 2010, an international report said on Thursday.

Rising human populations and clearance of forests for farming or biofuels were wrecking natural habitats, according to the study by Birdlife International, which groups experts in more than 100 conservation bodies worldwide.

Even common birds, such as doves or skylarks in Europe, were becoming scarcer in a worrying sign of wider upsets to nature. Birds are among the best researched of all wildlife and are a barometer of the environment.

"Bird species are slipping faster than ever towards extinction," according to Birdlife's "State of the World's Birds" report issued at an International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) congress in Barcelona.

In May, Birdlife International data for an IUCN "Red List" of endangered species showed that one in eight, or 1,226 of almost 10,000 bird species, were at risk of extinction with new threats including climate change.

Birds' decline showed governments were failing to live up to a commitment made at the UN Earth Summit in 2002 to achieve a significant reduction in the rate of loss of diversity of animals and plants by 2010, the report said.

"With two years to go, birds are showing that we are falling far short of the target, and that, far from slowing down, the rate of biodiversity loss is still accelerating," it said.


LONG RECORDS

Alison Stattersfield, head of science for Birdlife and lead author of the report, told Reuters: "Birds are a good indicator for the wider environment because we have such long records.

"People notice that there aren't so many birds around, even ones that are common." she said.

Millions of amateur birdwatchers have helped ensure longer and better records than for other creatures such as amphibians or insects.

Stattersfield said birds had been tracked by the "Red List" since 1988, the longest of any type of creature. Since then, 225 species have been listed as under greater threat, compared with just 17 whose status has improved.

Since 2000, three species were feared to have become extinct -- Spix's macaw in Brazil, the Hawaiian crow and the poo-uli, also in Hawaii, according to the report (www.birdlife.org/sowb).

Among bird families, 82 percent of albatrosses were threatened, 60 percent of cranes, 27 percent of parrots, 23 percent of pheasants and 20 percent of pigeons. Big birds that produce few eggs seemed most at risk.

Humans use about half of all species of birds, mainly as pets or as food. Among other uses, birds help keep insect pests in check in farmland and forests.
(Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

Birds in "Big Trouble" Due to Drugs, Fishing, More
Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 8 Oct 08

Bird species are in "big trouble" worldwide, a sign that the planet's health is also faltering, according to a new report released today at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) meeting in Barcelona, Spain.

Not only are rare birds getting rarer, but migratory songbirds, seabirds, and even common backyard birds are also plummeting, according to the State of the World's Birds, a report by the U.K. nonprofit BirdLife International.

The loss could have far-reaching consequences, according to scientists and policy makers.

Like the proverbial canary in a coal mine, the nearly 10,000 known bird species act as "environmental barometers" whose populations can appraise the greater well-being of their habitats.

"There's a serious erosion of biodiversity around us," Leon Bennun, director of science and policy for BirdLife International, said during a briefing at the IUCN's congress.

"It's a signal we should be picking up and not ignoring."

However, Bennun and others pointed out that conservation action can keep birds from disappearing—16 bird species have been saved in the past ten years, for instance.

BirdLife's Muhtari Aminu-Kano added, "It's not all stories of doom and gloom, but there's little reason to cheer about what's happening to biodiversity."

Scary Finding

One in eight of the nearly 10,000 known bird species are threatened, according to BirdLife data included in the 2008 IUCN Red List. More than 150 of bird species have vanished since 1500, the report noted.

But the rapid deterioration of common birds is "one of the scariest things" to come from the findings, said Tim Blackburn, director of the Institute of Zoology at the Zoological Society of London.

That's because ordinary birds play a more vital role in their habitats than rare birds, so losing these species could reverberate through the ecosystem, said Blackburn, who was not involved in the report.

For instance, millions of white-rumped vultures once flocked Asian skies. But since surveys began in the 1990s, their numbers have sunk by 99.9 percent, in part from ingesting a deadly anti-inflammatory drug, called diclofenac, found in dead livestock.

Without these scavenging animals, the rotting carcasses they used to feed on may pose serious disease risks to humans, Blackburn said.

Another common species, the European turtle dove, has fallen 65 percent in the past 25 years.

And in Argentina the household pet market, combined with logging, has now endangered the once-widespread yellow cardinal.

Squeezing Out Biodiversity

Birds are also suffering as human demand for farmland intensifies—especially with a soaring demand for biofuels decimating bird habitat.

"Humans are co-opting more and more natural areas for our own uses," Blackburn said. "The more we do that, the less room there is for native biodiversity."

The collapse of the world's fisheries due to overfishing, for example, has devastated seabird populations that have lost their main food source.

What's more, fishing industries have "severely knocked back" numbers of albatross, which drown when they try to grab bait from fishers' longline hooks and get pulled underwater, according to the BirdLife report.

The huge seabirds are long-lived and reproduce slowly, making them especially vulnerable, BirdLife's Bennun said.

Yet human-induced climate change "may be the biggest threat of all," the report said.

For instance, the azure-winged magpie may lose 95 percent of its habitat range in Spain and Portugal as warming temperatures displace populations northward.

Species Guardians

Some conservation actions can be relatively simple, such as helping vultures by banning diclofenac for both human and animal uses, Blackburn, of the Zoological Society of London, said.

But most situations are complex, interwoven with human activities across the globe.

BirdLife recently created the Preventing Extinctions Programme, which relies on a ground-based, volunteer network of "species guardians" to keep tabs on the 180 critically endangered bird species worldwide.

These individuals or groups observe the birds and their habitats and offer tailored suggestions, such as controlling predators or keeping nest sites safe.

Ultimately, though, the most crucial hurdle is to convince world leaders to value biodiversity as an asset, Bennun said.

"We need to hold governments accountable," he said. "It can't be business as usual."