BBC Wildlife Magazine

Global bird population­s face huge declines

Human behaviour is to blame for the downward spiral of bird species – but there is hope

- Simon Birch

An unpreceden­ted loss of bird population­s around the world is being driven by increasing­ly destructiv­e human impacts, say scientists in a stark new global review. Half of all the world’s 11,000 bird species are undergoing population declines, while just six per cent are increasing, according to BirdLife Internatio­nal’s State of the World’s Birds report. With the best available data coming from North America and Europe, almost 3 billion individual birds have been lost in North America since 1970, with a loss of up to 620 million individual birds across Europe since 1980.

The review identifies the key human activities having a negative impact on birds, from the destructio­n of natural habitat and the climate crisis to pesticides, pollution and invasive species.

The fate of the world’s birds is viewed as a valuable barometer as to the state of the natural world. “We use birds as indicators of the health of global ecosystems because we know more about birds than any other group of animals,” explains ornitholog­ist Alexander Lees, lead author of the study from Manchester Metropolit­an University. With the continuing collapse of natural habitats, the review warns that the world is entering a period of unparallel­ed change.

“We are now witnessing the first signs of a new wave of extinction­s of continenta­lly distribute­d bird species, which has followed the historic loss of species on islands, like the Dodo,” says Lees. The near-total destructio­n of the Atlantic forests of north-east Brazil for sugar cane production, for example, has led to the extinction of three endemic bird species within the past two decades: the Pernambuco pygmy-owl; the Alagoas foliage-gleaner; and the cryptic treehunter. Despite the plentiful bad news, the review nonetheles­s highlights conservati­on success stories such as that of the black-browed albatross, where mitigation measures have reduced albatross bycatch fatalities in the hake trawl fisheries of South Africa by up to 99 per cent.

“The good news is that conservati­on does work, and we have turned various species away from extinction through conservati­on,” says Lees, adding that people have a vital role to play in reversing the decline in bird population­s.

“The decisions we take on a daily basis as individual­s over what we buy and eat all add up to the human impact on the planet.”

 ?? ?? The endangered secretary bird will hopefully not follow the path of the now-extinct Alagoas foliage-gleaner (below)
The endangered secretary bird will hopefully not follow the path of the now-extinct Alagoas foliage-gleaner (below)
 ?? ?? Lead author Alexander Lees
Lead author Alexander Lees

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