Times Colonist

Birds of prey face global decline because of habitat loss, poisons

- CHRISTINA LARSON The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education.

WASHINGTON — Despite a few highprofil­e conservati­on success stories — like the dramatic comeback of bald eagle population­s in North America — birds of prey are in decline worldwide.

A new analysis of data from the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature and BirdLife Internatio­nal found that 30% of 557 raptor species worldwide are considered near threatened, vulnerable or endangered or critically endangered. Eighteen species are critically endangered, including the Philippine eagle, the hooded vulture and the Annobon scops owl, the researcher­s found.

Other species are in danger of becoming locally extinct in specific regions, meaning they may no longer play critical roles as top predators in those ecosystems, said Gerardo Ceballos, a bird scientist at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and co-author of the study published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

“The golden eagle is the national bird of Mexico, but we have very few golden eagles left in Mexico,” he said. A 2016 census estimated only about 100 breeding pairs remain in the country.

Harpy eagles were once widespread throughout southern Mexico and Central and South America, but tree cutting and burning has dramatical­ly shrunk their range.

Of threatened birds of prey that are active mostly during the day — including most hawks, eagles and vultures — 54% were falling in population, the study found. The same was true for 47% of threatened nocturnal raptors, such as owls.

That means “the factors causing the decline have not been remedied” and those species need immediate attention, said Jeff Johnson, a biologist at the University of North Texas, who was not involved in the study.

Globally, the biggest threats to these birds are habitat loss, climate change and toxic substances, said Evan Buechley, a research associate at the Smithsonia­n Migratory Bird Center and a scientist at nonprofit HawkWatch Internatio­nal who was not involved in the study.

The insecticid­e DDT thinned egg shells and decimated bald eagle population­s in North America, leading to its ban in the U.S. in 1972. But Buechley said other threats remain, including rodent pesticides and the lead in hunters’ bullets and shot pellets. Many raptors feed on rodents and dead animals.

The Andean condor is declining due to exposure to pesticides, lead and other toxic substances, said Sergio Lambertucc­i, a biologist at the National University of Comahue in Argentina.

Widespread use of an anti-inflammato­ry drug in livestock led to the rapid decline of vultures in South

Asia. The birds died after eating carcasses, shrinking the population of some species by 95% in recent decades.

In East Asia, many raptor species are long-distance migrants: They breed in northern China, Mongolia or Russia and travel down the eastern coast of China to spend summers in Southeast Asia or India.

“Certain areas of the coast will see 30 to 40 species during peak migration,” said Yang Liu, an ecologist at Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou, who was not involved in the study.

But eastern China is also the most populous and urban part of the country, with steep developmen­t pressures. “Sites that are bottleneck­s for migration, with thousands of birds passing through, are important to protect,” he said.

Of 4,200 sites identified by conservati­on groups as critical for raptor species globally, most “are unprotecte­d or only partly covered by protected areas,” said Stuart Butchart, chief scientist at BirdLife Internatio­nal in the United Kingdom.

A 2018 study in the journal Biological Conservati­on found that 52% of all raptor species worldwide are decreasing in population.

 ?? EVAN R. BUECHLEY VIA AP ?? A hooded vulture in Ethiopia.
EVAN R. BUECHLEY VIA AP A hooded vulture in Ethiopia.

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