SHORT COMMUNICATIONS, NOTES AND REPORTS

Similar documents
M. Di Vittorio 1*, F. Petrozzi 2

Correspondence: Acopian Center, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania 17961, U.S.A. Received 24 December 2015; revised 23 January 2016.

Eurasian Golden Plover (Pluvialis apricaria) wintering in Portugal: recent trend and estimates

Scavenging raptors in Spain, conservation status, trend and most important threats

The northbound migration of raptors

Vultures, Bats and Wind farms

The Distribution and Status of Cinereous Vulture (Aegypius monachus) at Jorbeer, Bikaner, Rajasthan, India: A Study of Near Threatened Monk Vulture

Review of the Illegal Killing, Trapping and Trade (IKB) of Birds of Prey in the Mediterranean

RAPTOR MIGRATION IN THE RED SEA AREA

The Status and Conservation of Griffon Vulture Gypsfulvus in Cyprus

Environmental Issues and Wind Energy Development in Egypt

Raptor Migration as a Conservation Opportunity: First Full-season Migration Counts in South-east Romania

European Red List Status VU -- Vulnerable, (IUCN version 3.1)

Joel Prashant Jack and Ashenafi Degefe

BULGARIAN SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION OF BIRDS

Vulture News 57 September 2007 NOTES

*Prabodh Chander Khatri Desert Wild Life Society, Bikaner (Raj.)- Pin , India *Author for Correspondence

vultures: : AMP case study

The Soaring Bird Sensitivity Mapping Tool

FIGURE 1 THE KINGBIRD

Alca torda. Report under the Article 12 of the Birds Directive Period Annex I International action plan. No No

Vulture updates - October Around the World of Vultures & VSG activities

Snowy owl numbers far lower than once thought 21 December 2017, by Tammy Webber

Avian scavengers, but not conspecifics, feeding on the carcasses of storm-killed Turkey Vultures on the Falkland Islands

AUTUMN HAWK MIGRATIONS AT FORT JOHNSON, CHARLESTON, S.C.

EEB 4260 Ornithology. Lecture Notes: Migration

Wind farms and birds - the SSS Specificity

General Secretariat Delegations Problem of necrophagous birds in Spain because of shortage of natural food: a serious threat to biodiversity

African STRP Focal Points Workshop Ramsar Convention Johannesburg (November/December 2010)

The status of the European Roller in Lithuania

Wildlife monitoring in Cyprus. Nicolaos Kassinis Game and Fauna Service (GFS)

CONVENTION ON MIGRATORY SPECIES

European Red List Status EN -- Endangered, (IUCN version 3.1)

Key concepts of Article 7(4): Version 2008

ADDENDUM TO BIRD IMPACT ASSESSMENT REPORT FOR THE PROPOSED WAAIHOEK WIND ENERGY FACILITY NEAR UTRECHT, KWAZULU-NATAL

Keywords: 8ES/conservation/Iberian lynx/lynx pardinus/monitoring/population status/situation analysis/status

ARTICLES Assessment of the occurrence and threats to Hooded Vultures Necrosyrtes monachus in western Kenyan towns

Lecture 14 - Conservation of birds

13 th MEETING OF THE TECHNICAL COMMITTEE March 2016, Israel

PERSECUTION OF RAPTORS IN EUROPE ASSESSED BY FINNISH AND SWEDISH RING RECOVERY DATA

Results of Collaborative Survey of Migratory Raptors in South East Asia. Asian Research and Conservation Network (ARRCN)

Vulture News 65 November 2013 NEWS AND COMMENTS. African Raptor Databank (ARDB) facility now online for vulture observers

DECLINING POPULATIONS: WHAT IS THE STATUS OF VULTURES IN QUEEN ELIZABETH NATIONAL PARK-UGANDA? R. Ssemmanda and A.J.Plumptre

Project Title: Rocky Point Bird Observatory Avian Monitoring Northern Saw- whet Owl Project: Introduction: Study Area and Methods:

Introduction. Campbell Murn 1,2, Peter Mundy 3, Munir Z. Virani 4,5, Wendy D. Borello 6, Graham J. Holloway 2 & Jean-Marc Thiollay 7.

Meenbog Wind Farm Development. Post-construction Bird Monitoring Programme

House Martin. Help us keep our House Martins out of the red

ROMANIA REPORT REGARDING THE CONSERVATION OF THE SAKER FALCON (FALCO CHERRUG) IN ROMANIA

Applications must accurately specify the article required and be accompanied by payment of ABC s costs.

Darwin Initiative for the Survival of Species. Annual Report

The Black Solitary Eagle

HNV farming and birds. Ian Burfield, BirdLife International Katrina Marsden, RSPB Jenja Kronenbitter, IFAB

Impact of wind farms on birds and bats

Appendix V. Revised Project Aims and Revised Logical Framework (2003)

Sheikh Zayed releases 1994

International corncrake monitoring

CONFERENCE REPORTS. Vulture News 67 November P.J. Mundy. 13 th Pan African Ornithological Congress (Arusha, Tanzania), October 2012

Best Practice Avifaunal Monitoring/Impact Assessment: The way forward in South Africa. Hanneline Smit

Crex crex Europe & Western Asia/Sub-Saharan Africa

The Rufford Foundation Final Report

EF Retief Presenter. Co-Authors MD Anderson; D Harebottle; A Jenkins; R Simmons; HA Smit; C Van Rooyen; J Smallie

Red-footed Falcon (Falco vespertinus) in Israel. Prof. Reuven Yosef International Birding & Research Centre in Eilat, Israel Photographs: Eyal Bartov

Kingston Field Naturalists

DISTRIBUTION, AND RELATIVE ABUNDANCE OF THE COMMON DOLPHIN DELPHINUS DELPHIS IN THE BAY OF BISCAY

Golden Eagle (Aquila chrysaetos)

EVERY BIRD COUNTS CHAMPIONS OF THE FLYWAY. Racing for a Good Cause. THE BEST BINOCULAR IN THE HISTORY OF ZEISS. ZEISS Victory SF

Subject: Comments on FWS R5 ES , Environmental Impact Statement for Beech Ridge Energy s Habitat Conservation Plan

Spain - The Best of Coto Donana in Winter

Platalea leucorodia leucorodia West Europe/West Mediterranean & West Africa

Scolopax rusticola Europe/South & West Europe & North Africa

Vulture updates - October Around the World of Vultures & VSG activities

RENF TETRAX - Reinforcement of the migratory breeding populations of the Little Bustard, Tetrax tetrax in France LIFE04 NAT/FR/000091

PLAN DE VALORIZACIÓN DE IPOT January 2012

Greenlaw Mountain Hawk Watch Fall 2012

CURRICULUM VITAE [RAPTORS & MOVEMENT ECOLOGY]

Ecological Impacts of Wind Farms: Global Studies. Are Wind Farms Hazardous to Birds and Bats? Stephen J. Ambrose

BIRD MONITORING REPORT PARAVANI TRANSMISSION LINE

Uptake of BirdLife South Africa/ EWT Best Practice Guidelines for Bird and Wind Energy

European Red List Status EN -- Endangered, (IUCN version 3.1)

Survival of the African white-backed vulture Gyps africanus in north-eastern South Africa

Krnovo Wind Farm. Bird Survey Report (November February 2016) March Akuo Energy

Working with others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.

LIFE FOR KRESNA GORGE - Conservation of birds of prey in Kresna Gorge, Bulgaria LIFE11 NAT/BG/000363

NOTES Partial albino African Marsh Harrier at Langebaan, South Africa

NATIONAL PARK AUTHORITY REPORT ON PEAK DISTRICT BIRD OF PREY INITIATIVE

Oxyura leucocephala East Mediterranean, Turkey & South-west Asia

HINDE S BABBLER CONSERVATION MONTH PROJECT REPORT

LARGE-SCALE RINGING RECOVERY ANALYSIS OF EUROPEAN WHITE STORKS (Ciconia ciconia)

Oxyura leucocephala West Mediterranean (Spain & Morocco)

REPORT OF AN OBSERVATION OF BARBARY FALCON Falco peregrinus pelegrinoides IN AGDZ (MOROCCO) ON DECEMBER 2010

SPATIAL CONSERVATION PLANNING FOR WIND FARM SITING IN LESOTHO

TUNDRA SWANS IN NORTHEASTERN KEEWATIN DISTRICT, N.W.T.

Melanitta fusca fusca Western Siberia & Northern Europe/NW Europe

Bats in Alaska: Citizen Science and Field Research Give New Insights about their Distribution, Ecology, and Overwintering Behavior

BirdLife International Marine Programme Marine Important Bird & Biodiversity Areas (Marine IBAs)

What is a Bird of Prey?

First description of migration and wintering of adult Egyptian Vultures Neophron percnopterus tracked by GPS satellite telemetry

Grus grus grus Eastern Europe/Turkey, Middle East & NE Africa

WINTER MIGRATION OF STEPPE EAGLES (AQUILA NIPALENSIS) AT JORBEER, BIKANER

THE SPRING MIGRATION OF THE OVER EUROPE.

Transcription:

SHORT COMMUNICATIONS, NOTES AND REPORTS New record of African White-backed Vulture (Gyps africanus) in Europe A. Godino * & C. Machado Centro de Estudos da Avifauna Ibérica, 7005-138, Évora, Portugal * Corresponding author: alfonsogodino@gmail.com The African White-backed Vulture (Gyps africanus) was the most common vulture in Africa, with a wide distribution along the entire Sahel region, into East and Southern Africa (IUCN, 2014). From the beginning of 21 st Century, this species has exhibited declines across much of its range, from 50% to 90% in different regions (Nikolaus 2006, Thiollay 2006, Virani et al., 2011, Ogada et al. 2015). Due to this situation, the global conservation category of this vulture has been decreased to Endangered (IUCN, 2014). Outside the African range, in Europe, few records exist of African White-backed Vultures. The first recorded observation of this species in Europe was in October 2006, with one bird photographed at the most southwesterly point of Portugal, San Vicente Cape (Jara et al. 2008). 52 After this first observation, three more records have been collected on the north side of Gibraltar Strait (southern Spain): an immature, possibly a 2 nd year bird, in September 2008; a 2 nd year bird killed by a wind turbine in June 2009 (Dies et al. 2011) and another immature bird in September 2011 (Gutiérrez et al. 2013). More recently, in May 2014, the first observation of the species in North Africa was recorded at Tetouan in northern Morocco, on the southern side of Gibraltar Strait (El Khamlichi et al. 2014). Here we report a new observation of an African White-backed Vulture in southeast Portugal, in the protected area of Moura/Mourão/Barrancos, close to the Spanish border (N 38.2280, E 7.1570).

On August 24 th 2014, whilst at the Biological Station of Garducho (Mourão Council), we observed a group of 70 Eurasian Griffons (Gyps fulvus) landing at a cow carcass, approximately 200 m from the building. During initial observations, whilst using a telescope to search for tagged birds, we noticed a vulture that was clearly different to the other vultures present. Closer observation enabled more details and characteristics to be observed, and these revealed a bird with a darker face than the Eurasian Griffons in addition to streaked chest feathers with a narrow light area along the centre of these feathers (Figure 1). The vulture was also much smaller in size compared to the other vultures close to it (Figure 2). The age of this African White-backed Vulture was estimated as a 2-3 years (A. Botha personal communication). Figure 1: Gyps africanus photographed in Portugal This new observation in SE Portugal Europe. It is also the most northerly is the 5 th record of this species in observation and the first outside the 53

Gibraltar Strait and San Vicente Cape areas, which are both in the southern Iberian Peninsula. These areas, and especially because the Gibraltar Strait is the most important bird migration corridor in Western Europe (Zalles & Bildstein 2000), have important concentrations of vultures during spring and autumn migrations. They are also adjacent to the most important breeding population of vultures in the southern Iberian Peninsula, with almost 2000 breeding pairs of Eurasian Griffons (Garrido & Romero 2009). Figure 2: Gyps africanus next to Gyps fulvus photographed in Portugal Although the occurrence of African observation of Rüppell s Griffon in White-backed Vultures in the Iberian Spain was in 1990 (Fernández 1998) Peninsula is a relatively recent and in the subsequent decade, no situation, it is not new for other fewer than 23 observations have typically African vulture species, been confirmed in Spain and such as the Rüppell s Griffon (Gyps Portugal (Gutiérrez 2003). Since that rueppellii). The first recorded time, there has been a notable 54

increase in records of Rüppell s Griffon in the Iberian Peninsula, with most of the observation around the Gibraltar Strait area (De Juana 2006, Gutiérrez et al. 2010). An unsuccessful breeding attempt has also been recorded in eastern central Portugal (Costa et al. 2003), whilst several records of this species exist in southeast France in 2013 from a bird that was wing-tagged in Portugal (Godino & Machado 2013, Godino & Machado in prep.). Gutiérrez (2003) suggests that the increasing number of Rüppell s Griffon sightings in Europe is due to the species associating with increasing wintering population of Eurasian Griffons in West Africa; more than 5000 Eurasian Griffons cross the Gibraltar Strait during autumn migration (Camiña, 2004). This migratory population comes into contact in its wintering areas with local Rüppell s Griffon populations (Roy 2005), and when the Eurasian Griffons return to Europe in the spring, some Rüppell s Griffons join them on this return. The relatively recent and still few observations of African Whitebacked Vultures in the Iberian Peninsula could be a precursor of a similar process. In both cases the first records have occurred in the same geographical area (the 55 Gibraltar Strait) and during similar periods the end of summer and early autumn (Jara et al. 2008, Dies et al. 2011, Gutiérrez et al. 2013). In this context, another raptor species, the North African Long-Legged Buzzard (Buteo rufinus cirtensis), had a similar process in the past and has been recently recorded breeding in the Gibraltar Strait area in southern Spain (Elorriaga & Muñoz, 2010). Both Rüppell s Griffon and African White-backed Vulture populations are in strong decline across West Africa (Nikolaus, 2006; Thiollay, 2006; IUCN, 2014, Ogada et al. 2015), almost certainly in areas where these populations come into contact with wintering Eurasian Griffons. However, in spite of these population declines, the number of Rüppell s Griffons seen in the Iberian Peninsula is increasing (De Juana 2006, Gutiérrez et al. 2010). These contrary situations indicate that a range of factors is very likely to be responsible, and it has been suggested that the influence of global climate change should be investigated (Ramírez et al. 2011). With vulture populations, and in particular the African White-backed Vulture, undergoing declines in West Africa, the new record reported here could be an indicator of an

increasing movement pattern into Europe for this species, in the same way as Rüppell s Griffon. Due to the critical situation of the African White-backed Vulture, it is urgently necessary to research the reasons of this process, in particular the evolution of vulture populations in southwest Europe with movements of African vultures into this region. Acknowledgments Special thanks to J. Elorriaga, D. Forsman, R. El Khamlichi and A. Botha for the comments and help with the identification. Thanks also to the Centro de Estudos da Avifauna Ibérica (CEAI) to facilitate the material for this observation and to C. Murn for improving and reviewing this note. References Camiña, A. 2004. Griffon Vulture Gyps fulvus monitoring in Spain: current research and conservation projects. In Chancellor, R.D. & B.-U. Meyburg (eds.). Raptors Worldwide. WWGBP/MME, Berlin. Costa H, Bolton M, Matias R, Moore CC, Tomé R. 2003. Aves de ocorrência rara ou accidental em Portugal. Relátorio do Comité Portugués de Raridades referente aos anos de 1999, 2000 e 2001. Anuário Ornitológico 1:3-35. De Juana, E. 2006. Aves raras de España. Lynx Edicions. Barcelona. Dies, J.I., J.A. Lorenzo, R. Gutiérrez, E. García, G. Gorospe, J. Martí-Aledo, P. Gutiérrez, C. Vidal, S. Sales y D. López-Velasco. 2011. Observaciones de aves raras en España 2009. Ardeola 58:441-480. El Khamlichi, R., K. El Haoua & M. Amezian. 2014. Gyps africanus: a new specie for Morocco. http://moroccanbirds.blogspot.com/2014_05_01_archive.html Elorriaga, J. & Muñoz, A.R. 2010. First breeding record of North African Long-legged Buzzard Buteo rufinus cirtensis in continental Europe. British Birds 103:399-401. Fernández y Fernández Arroyo, F.J. 1998. Observaciones de buitres africanos en España. Rev. Fac. Ciencias de la UNED, Nº 1. 56

Garrido, J.R. y F. Romero. 2009. El buitre leonado en Andalucía. In, J.C. del Moral (Ed.). El buitre leonado en España. Población reproductora en 2008 y método de censo. SEO/BirdLife, Madrid. Godino A. & Machado C. 2013. Grifo de Rüppell. Primeira marcaçao desta espécie com placa alar em Portugal. http://naturlink.sapo.pt Gutiérrez, R. 2003. Occurrence of Rüppell s Griffon Vulture in Europe. Dutch Birding 25:289-303. Gutiérrez, R. Elorriaga, J. & Daly, S. 2010. How many Rüppell s vultures do we have in Spain? An attempt to photo-identify the birds in autumn 2010. Retrieved from http://www.rarebirds.net/arbsi036.htm Gutiérrez, R., J.A. Lorenzo, J. Elorriaga, G. Gorospe, D. López-Velasco, J. Martí-Aledo, G. Rodriguez y S. Sales. 2013. Observaciones de aves raras en España, 2011. Ardeola 60: 437-506. IUCN. 2014. Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2014.2. www.iucnredlist.org. Downloaded on 30 August 2014. Jara. J., H. Costa, R. Matias, C.C. Moore, C. Noivo & R. Tipper. 2008. Relatório do Comité Português de Raridades referente aos anos de 2006 e 2007. Anuário Ornitológico. Vol 6. Sociedade Portuguesa para o Estudo das Aves. Nikolaus, G. 2006. Commentary: where have the African vultures gone? Vulture News:65-67. Ogada, D. L., Shaw, P., Beyers, R. L., Buij, R., Murn, C., Thiollay, J-M., Beale, C. M., Holdo, R. M., Pomeroy, C., Baker, N., Krüger, S. C., Botha, A., Virani, M. Z., Monadjem, A. & Sinclair, A. R. E. (2015). Another continental vulture crisis: Africa s vultures collapsing toward extinction. Conservation Letters doi: 10.1111/conl.12182 Ramírez, J., A.R. Muñoz, A. Onrubia, A. de la Cruz, D. Cuenca, J.M. González & G.M. Arroyo. 2011. Spring movements of Rüppell s Vulture Gyps rueppellii across the Strait of Gibraltar. Ostrich 82:71-73. Roy, K. 2005. Sightings of European Griffon Vultures Gyps fulvus in eastern Gambia from December 1999 to January 2005. Vulture News 53: 20-23. 57

Thiollay, J-M. 2006. Several declines of large birds in the northern Sahel of West Africa: a long-term assessment. Bird Conservation International 16: 353-365. Virani, M., Kendall, C., Njoroge, P. & Thomsett, S. 2011. Major declines in the abundance of vultures and other scavenging raptors in and around the Masai Mara ecosystem, Kenya. Biological Conservation 144:746-752. Zalles, J.L., and K.L. Bildstein. 2000. Raptor watch: A global directory of raptor migration sites. Cambridge, UK. BirdLife International; Kempton, PA: Hawk Mountain Sanctuary. ****** 58