Space Industry and Business News
FLORA AND FAUNA
Africa's large birds of prey facing 'extinction crisis': study
stock image only
Africa's large birds of prey facing 'extinction crisis': study
By Rochelle GLUZMAN
Paris (AFP) Jan 4, 2024

The flamboyantly plumed Secretary Bird and the serpent-catching Snake Eagle are among dozens of Africa's large birds of prey facing a human-driven "extinction crisis" researchers said on Thursday.

Previous research has shown that rapid human and agricultural expansion has had a particularly dire impact on vultures in Africa, due to habitat change and poisoning.

But the new study by researchers at the University of St Andrews and The Peregrine Fund found that other large birds of prey -- or raptors -- that do not depend on scavenging and are less vulnerable to poisoning had also suffered similarly severe depletions.

Scientists said these large birds of prey in decline face a "double jeopardy" -- increasingly dependent on protected areas, they also have a more restricted habitat.

Unless Africa's conservation network is extended and other human threats are eased, "large raptor species are unlikely to persist over much of the continent's unprotected land by the latter half of this century", said lead author Philip Shaw, honorary research fellow at the University of St Andrews.

The study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, measured changes in population abundance for 42 raptor species in Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali, northern Cameroon, Kenya and Botswana during two periods, 1969 to 1995 and 2000 to 2020.

Of the birds studied, 37 species had witnessed declines, with 29 plummeting by at least 30 percent over three generational periods.

The authors concluded that as a group, Africa's diurnal raptors -- those active during the day like eagles -- "are facing an extinction crisis, with more than two-thirds of the species examined potentially qualifying as globally threatened".

- Human impact -

Larger birds are particularly at risk because they need a wider habitat and breed more slowly than smaller birds, rendering their populations less resilient.

Human threats include shooting, trapping, poisoning, electrocutions or collisions with energy infrastructure, with birds killed for food or belief-based reasons.

The animals they prey on are also targeted.

Species declines were most pronounced in West and Central Africa, where protected areas are particularly underfunded.

High regional levels of poverty and corruption have been linked to adverse conservation outcomes for numerous charismatic mammal species, according to the study.

To protect the birds, the researchers point to two solutions.

The first is to expand protected areas in Africa in line with one the goals set at the Convention of Biological Diversity (COP 15) in 2022 -- to effectively conserve and manage at least 30 percent of the world's surface by 2030.

Currently, protected areas account for just 14 percent of Africa's land and inland waters, Shaw said.

The second is to manage existing protected areas more effectively, Shaw added.

Researchers stress that effective conservation of large birds of prey is in human societies' best interests.

Vultures, for example, by scavenging carcasses can limit the transmission of zoonotic diseases to human populations, Shaw said.

The loss of big predators also has a profound effect on ecosystems.

Without them, prey populations can become unregulated and damage crops.

"In Africa, losing the largest and most uniquely adapted avian predators will most likely have the biggest impact on ecosystem function," Shaw said.

In Colombia, rare bird flaunts male and female feathers
Villamaria, Colombia (AFP) Jan 5, 2024 - On the right side of its body, the bird flaunted the typical blue plumage and black head of the male Green Honeycreeper. On the left, it was a beautiful grass green.

According to experts, the specimen spotted in Colombia was a rare example of "bilateral gynandromorphy" -- a condition in which one side of an animal exhibits male characteristics and the other female.

Amateur photographer John Murillo said he first spotted the unique bird through his camera lens when it landed on a feeder to enjoy a meal of bananas and grapes at a nature reserve in Villamaria in Colombia's west in late 2019.

It was then observed by Murillo and experts for more than a year, but never captured.

In an article published last month in the Journal of Field Ornithology, Murillo and a group of bird scientists report the first recorded observation of gynandromorphy in a living Green Honeycreeper (Chlorophanes spiza.)

"In birds, the phenomenon is thought to arise as a result of an error during egg meiosis (a type of cell division), with subsequent double fertilization by separate sperm," they wrote.

Whether the internal organs of the bird were also gynandromporphic and whether it was fertile, was "impossible to tell," the team added.

Green Honeycreepers are small birds found in the tropics from southern Mexico to Brazil.

Murillo, 56, told AFP he felt very fortunate to have observed something "very different from anything we have seen."

He also recounted the bird's "strange" behavior: "it was always alone" at the feeder.

Murillo said the bird seemed more comfortable with humans than with individuals of its kind.

"It is unique in the world, and so it will die," he said.

Related Links
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Researchers find reindeer sleep while chewing their cud
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 22, 2023
How can Santa's eight tiny reindeer get all around the world in one night? New research found reindeer might be more rested in winter because their brains go into power-saving mode while chewing their cud. A study published Thursday by researchers in Norway found brainwaves observed in reindeer during mimic brainwaves present during non-REM sleep, which suggests reindeer are more rested after ruminating. Rumination, commonly known as chewing cud, is the act of regurgitating food a ... read more

FLORA AND FAUNA
Amazon's game streaming platform Twitch cuts 500 jobs

The Future of fashion: Waste is the new cotton

Researchers 3D print components for a portable mass spectrometer

GESTRA space radar successfully enters final test phase

FLORA AND FAUNA
Viasat Secures Major U.S. Air Force Contract for Advanced Tech Integration

HawkEye 360's Pathfinder constellation complete five years of Advanced RF Detection

New antenna offers unprecedented flexibility for military applications

WVU Team Tackles Radio Interference in Astronomy with NSF Funding

FLORA AND FAUNA
FLORA AND FAUNA
GMV reinforces satellite expertise with new Galileo Operations Center in Madrid

Airbus presents first flight model structure for Galileo Second Generation

Galileo Gen2 satellite production commences at Airbus facility

Galileo Second Generation satellite aces first hardware tests

FLORA AND FAUNA
Sirius Jet: World's First Hydrogen VTOL

Aurora Flight Sciences to build DARPA's X-65 utilizing Active Flow Control

Black box from US Osprey found off Japan

Taiwan detects four Chinese balloons ahead of election

FLORA AND FAUNA
Malaysia's 'Silicon Valley' hit by four-day water cut

Tantalum silicide's key role in high-temperature spintronic devices

US to gather chips supply chain intel to boost national security

Utility-Scale Quantum Program Advances Toward Prototyping

FLORA AND FAUNA
NOAA Approves Sidus Space for Government and Commercial Earth Imaging

Earth Blox delivers climate and nature analytics at scale through Google Cloud Marketplace

Rocket lifts four satellites into orbit

China Launches Land Surveyor Satellites, Bolstering Earth Observation Network

FLORA AND FAUNA
Spain politicians bicker as plastic 'nurdle' spill swamps beaches

Bhutan's Tobgay, environmental advocate facing economic headwinds

Thai cabinet endorses clean air bill

Amsterdam 'fashion library' takes aim at clothes waste

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.