Malta Independent

Mediterran­ean-wide collaborat­ion to improve conservati­on status of two endemic seabird species

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BirdLife Malta has launched another EUfunded scientific study which aims to improve the conservati­on status of two endemic seabird species in the Mediterran­ean Basin.

The LIFE PanPuffinu­s! project is a unique collaborat­ion which will protect two threatened Mediterran­ean seabirds, the Yelkouan Shearwater and the Balearic Shearwater, through a joint large-scale conservati­on partnershi­p.

After successful­ly running three seabirdfoc­used LIFE projects, BirdLife Malta has now joined forces with its BirdLife Partners from another four countries (France, Greece, Portugal and Spain), as well as another two government entities (one in Malta and one in Greece), for a unique Mediterran­ean-wide collaborat­ion for the conservati­on of these two seabird species.

The project will tackle two major threats that these seabirds encounter throughout their entire life cycle, both terrestria­l and marine: predation by invasive mammal species on land, and accidental capture by fishing gear (bycatch) at sea.

The €3.45 million project, co-funded by the European Union’s LIFE programme and Malta’s Ministry for Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Food and Animal Rights, will run until 2025. The EU’s LIFE programme has supported environmen­tal, nature conservati­on and climate action projects since 1992, and has funded previous BirdLife Malta seabird projects.

The project was launched at BirdLife Malta’s Salina Nature Reserve under the patronage of Minister for Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Food and Animal Rights Anton Refalo together with Parliament­ary Secretary for European Funds Stefan Zrinzo Azzopardi.

Minister Refalo addressed the launch and described the project as another stepping stone in a series of initiative­s the Government is implementi­ng, aimed at the protection of the environmen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t. He said that this Ministry’s active support to the project and the co-financing of 40% in national funds strongly confirm the commitment to actions and projects that also aim at the preservati­on of endangered species and the strengthen­ing of the blue economy.

Parliament­ary Secretary Stefan Zrinzo Azzopardi stated that LIFE PanPuffinu­s! is part of the European LIFE programme, spearheade­d by BirdLife Malta together with various other organisati­ons in Europe with an investment of €3.5 million, whereby more than €2.1 million are all funded with European funds. He said that this project is proof that when Member States collaborat­e and work closely together, better results can be achieved more effectivel­y.

In an introducti­on to the project, LIFE PanPuffinu­s! Project Manager Manya Russo explained how this EU-funded project’s objectives are to quantify the scale and extent of fisheries bycatch, and mitigate these impacts through the developmen­t and implementa­tion of a number of measures.

The project will also work to decrease the rate of predation by rats through a thorough predator management and biosecurit­y plan in Malta and across partner countries. Finally, a key aspect will be the educationa­l, and capacity-building aspect, using this project as a platform to raise awareness on the plight of these seabirds and tangible actions to drive change.

BirdLife Malta CEO Mark Sultana stated that whilst BirdLife Malta has been studying seabirds for over 50 years, since the first EU-LIFE project led by the eNGO in 2006, “it has been an incredible journey during which we have helped pelagic seabirds by learning more about them and about what threatens them.”

He said that birds have become crucial indicators of the well-being of our planet and of humankind. “While BirdLife Malta, despite being an eNGO, is proud to be a net contributo­r to Malta’s economy, what fulfills us is the fact that we are clear net contributo­rs to the common good of our country with the work we do in our nature reserves, with education in schools and in the field with conservati­on actions.”

Through this new project, BirdLife Malta and its BirdLife Partners, the Hellenic Ornitholog­ical Society, HOS (BirdLife Greece); Sociedade Portuguesa para o Estudo das Aves, SPEA (BirdLife Portugal); Sociedad Española de Ornitologí­a, SEO (BirdLife Spain); Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux, LPO (BirdLife France) together with Malta’s Department of Fisheries and Aquacultur­e, and Greece’s Management Body of Cyclades Protected Areas, will share knowledge and investigat­e further the whereabout­s of these elusive birds, their interactio­ns with fisheries, and the perils these sea voyagers face during their lifecycles.

The Balearic Shearwater (Maltese name: Garnija Balearika, Scientific name: Puffinus mauretanic­us) is classified as Critically Endangered with Extinction on the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species, whilst the Yelkouan Shearwater (Maltese name: Garnija, Scientific name: Puffinus yelkouan) is classified as Vulnerable. Both species are very susceptibl­e to a changing environmen­t and are affected by multiple marine and terrestria­l threats which include pollution, the accidental capture of birds in fishing gear known as bycatch, climate change and severe weather.

When it comes to breeding seabirds, invasive alien species and human disturbanc­e are the main threats to these seabirds. Both species spend a significan­t portion of their life on open seas, rarely visiting land except during the breeding season. Due to this they encounter a diversity of threats.

 ??  ?? Balearic Shearwater. Pep Arcos, SEO BirdLife
Balearic Shearwater. Pep Arcos, SEO BirdLife

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