死鸟飞翔":放归野外的北美康复猛禽能否降低人为死亡率?

IF 1.7 3区 生物学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Christian A. Hagen, John M. Goodell, B. Millsap, Guthrie S. Zimmerman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着人类为满足社会能源需求而扩大足迹,野生动物也受到了影响。尤其是猛禽,极易受到人为因素的影响而死亡。我们鼓励工业部门抵消这些死亡原因。已经提出了几种减少这些损失的方案,包括猛禽康复。然而,其作为一种保护工具的作用尚未得到验证。目前,还没有同行评议的人口学分析,使用从康复猛禽中获得的释放后数据来评估其在大陆范围内的有效性。我们的目标是估算康复猛禽和野生猛禽的年存活率,然后将这些估算结果用于人口统计模型,以评估在个体和种群水平上的潜在影响。我们假设,经过适应期后,康复猛禽的存活率与野生猛禽类似,而寿命较长的物种(K-选择)将从这些放归中获益最多。我们利用美国地质调查局鸟类带环实验室的带环恢复数据(1974-2018 年),对 20 个猛禽物种的康复个体(n = 125 740)与野生鸟类(n = 1 913 352)的存活率进行建模比较。17个有充足恢复数据的物种的结果表明,5个物种的康复存活率≠野生存活率,2个物种的估计值不确定,10个物种在释放后第二年和第三年的康复存活率≈野生存活率。我们从全美 24 个康复中心获得了入院数据(n = 69 707)和放归数据(n = 25 740)(2012-2021 年)。我们将存活率、繁殖率和释放人数整合到人口统计模型中。这些模型量化了康复猛禽对更广泛的保护工作的贡献程度,尤其是在个体捕获的情况下。除两个物种外,其他所有物种无论放归数量多少,都有可测量的个体数量增加。一般情况下,K-选择的物种从恢复后的种群补充中获益更大。这些结果证明,恢复可作为抵消附带捕获的缓解工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘Dead birds flying': can north American rehabilitated raptors released into the wild mitigate anthropogenic mortality?
As the human footprint expands to meet societal energy needs, as do the impacts to wildlife. Raptors in particular are highly susceptible to anthropogenic caused mortality. Industry sectors are encouraged to offset these causes of mortality. Several options to mitigate these losses have been proposed, including raptor rehabilitation. However, its role as a conservation tool is untested. Currently no peer‐reviewed demographic analyses exist using post‐release data from rehabilitated raptors to evaluate its effectiveness at continental scales. Our objectives were to estimate annual survival of rehabilitated and wild raptors, and then use those estimates in demographic models to assess potential effects at individual and population levels. We hypothesized that rehabilitated raptors would survive similarly to their wild counterparts after an acclimation period, and that longer‐lived species (K‐selected) would benefit most from these releases. We used US Geological Survey Bird Banding Lab band‐recovery data (1974–2018) from 20 raptor species for modeling survival of rehabilitated individuals (n = 125 740) in comparison to wild birds (n = 1 913 352). Results from 17 species with adequate recovery data indicated that five species rehabilitated ≠ wild survival, two species had uncertain estimates, and 10 species rehabilitated ≈ wild survival by years two and three post‐release. We acquired admission (n = 69 707) and release (n = 25 740) data from 24 rehabilitation centers across the US (2012–2021). We integrated survival, fecundity and numbers of releases into demographic models. These models quantified the extent to which rehabilitated raptors may contribute to broader conservation efforts, especially in the context of individual take. All but two species, had measurable numbers of individuals added to the population regardless of the number of releases. The general pattern was for K‐selected species to yield larger benefits from rehabilitated supplementation to the population. These results provide evidence that rehabilitation may serve as mitigation tool to offset incidental take.
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来源期刊
Wildlife Biology
Wildlife Biology 生物-动物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: WILDLIFE BIOLOGY is a high-quality scientific forum directing concise and up-to-date information to scientists, administrators, wildlife managers and conservationists. The journal encourages and welcomes original papers, short communications and reviews written in English from throughout the world. The journal accepts theoretical, empirical, and practical articles of high standard from all areas of wildlife science with the primary task of creating the scientific basis for the enhancement of wildlife management practices. Our concept of ''wildlife'' mainly includes mammal and bird species, but studies on other species or phenomena relevant to wildlife management are also of great interest. We adopt a broad concept of wildlife management, including all structures and actions with the purpose of conservation, sustainable use, and/or control of wildlife and its habitats, in order to safeguard sustainable relationships between wildlife and other human interests.
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