Title: Evaluation of the network of protection areas for the feeding of scavengers in Spain: from biodiversity conservation to greenhouse gas emission savings |
Authors: Morales-Reyes, Zebensui Perez-García, Juan M. Moleón, Marcos Botella, Francisco Carrete, Martina Donázar, José Antonio Cortes Avizanda, Ainara Arrondo, Eneko Moreno-Opo, Ruben Jiménez, Jose Margalida, Antoni Sánchez-Zapata, Jose A |
Editor: British Ecological Society |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Biología Aplicada |
Issue Date: 2016-11-07 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/33889 |
Abstract:
1. Protected areas are one of the most common strategies for wildlife conservation world-wide.
However, their effectiveness is rarely evaluated. In Europe, after the outbreak of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, a restrictive sanitary regulation (EC 1774/2002) prohibited the abandonment of dead livestock in extensive farming (extensive livestock) in the field, which led to negative
consequences for scavengers. As an attempt to mitigate this negative impact, a new regulation was
approved (EC 142/2011) to allow farmers to leave extensive livestock carcasses in the so-called
‘Protection areas for the feeding of necrophagous species of European interest’ (PAFs).
2. Our general aims were to quantify (i) the proportion of breeding distribution of targeted
scavenger species overlapping PAFs; (ii) the extensive livestock carrion biomass available
inside PAFs; (iii) the proportion of breeding distribution of non-targeted scavenger species
falling within PAFs; (iv) the overlap between the home range of vultures and PAFs, as well
as the extent to which vultures move through different administrative units; and (v) the savings in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in relation to the pre-PAF scenario.
3. After assessing the status of PAF implementation in every region of peninsular Spain, we
analysed the large-scale spatial information of extensive livestock carrion availability and
scavenger breeding distribution, movement data of GPS-tracked vultures, and the annual
GHG emissions associated with the transport of livestock carcasses.
4. Most regions established PAFs in their territories, although design criteria were variable.
The breeding distribution of targeted species was better represented within PAFs than that of
non-targeted species. The extensive livestock carrion biomass potentially available for scavengers within PAFs represented 34 9% of the annual extensive livestock biomass generated in
peninsular Spain. The overlap between the home range of GPS-marked vulture populations
and PAFs ranged between 63 4% and 100%. The minimum convex polygon of these and
other GPS-tracked vulture populations in peninsular Spain encompassed 3–14 Spanish regions and 1–4 countries. Post-PAF there was a potential reduction of c. 55 7% of GHG
emissions compared to pre-PAF.
5. Synthesis and applications. The implementation of the new sanitary regulation by means
of areas for the feeding of scavengers could mean an important improvement in scavenger
conservation and a noteworthy reduction in greenhouse gas emissions: in Spain, extensive
livestock carrion availability might increase to 33 474 t yr1
, and 43 344 t of CO2 eq. might
be saved annually. However, we identified some gaps related to the distribution of endangered
facultative scavengers. Moreover, given that vultures are highly mobile organisms, the design
and management of these feeding areas should be coordinated at both the supra-regional and
supra-national scales.
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Keywords/Subjects: carrion availability conservation effectiveness ecosystem services EU sanitary policies facultative scavengers |
Knowledge area: CDU: Ciencias puras y naturales: Biología |
Type of document: application/pdf |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12833 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Biología Aplicada
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