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Assessing the sustainability of harvest of the European Turtle-dove along the European western flyway

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2019

HERVÉ LORMÉE*
Affiliation:
Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage, 79360 Villiers en Bois, France.
CHRISTOPHE BARBRAUD
Affiliation:
Centre d’Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, UMR 7372, CNRS – Université La Rochelle, 79360 Villiers-en-Bois, France.
WILL PEACH
Affiliation:
RSPB Centre for Conservation Science, RSPB, The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire SG19 2DL, UK.
CARLES CARBONERAS
Affiliation:
RSPB Centre for Conservation Science, RSPB, The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire SG19 2DL, UK.
JEAN DOMINIQUE LEBRETON
Affiliation:
Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle & Evolutive, CNRS, 34293 Montpellier, France.
LARA MORENO-ZARATE
Affiliation:
Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (IREC) (CSIC-UCLM-JCCM), Ronda de Toledo, 12, 13005 Ciudad Real, Spain.
LEO BACON
Affiliation:
Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage, Unité Avifaune Migratrice, La Tour du Valat, Le Sambuc, FR-13200 Arles, France.
CYRIL ERAUD
Affiliation:
Office National de la Chasse et de la Faune Sauvage, 79360 Villiers en Bois, France.
*
*Author for correspondence; email: herve.lormee@oncfs.gouv.fr
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Summary

With a decline exceeding 30% over three generations, the once-common European Turtle-dove is now considered globally threatened by IUCN. As a legal game species in 10 European countries, the recent International Single Species Action Plan for this species highlighted the need to carry out an assessment of the sustainability of current levels of hunting. In 2013–2014, the Western European population was estimated at 1.3–2.1 million pairs, and the hunting bag in the same region to be 1.1 million birds. Using the Demographic Invariant Method, we assessed whether current levels of hunting harvest within Europe constitute overexploitation of the western flyway European Turtle-dove population. We calculated the maximum growth rate λmax that a population might achieve in the absence of any additive mortality. Then we estimated the potential maximum harvestable population fraction (P) allowed by excess population growth. We explored a wide range of plausible scenarios relating to assumed demographic rates, geographic scope of the flyway and management objectives. λmax was estimated to lie between 1.551 and 1.869. Current levels of hunting along the western flyway are more than double the sustainable fraction (P) under all suitably conservative scenarios, and only fall below this threshold under the most restrictive assumptions. We conclude that current levels of legal hunting along the western flyway are unlikely to be sustainable. Reducing uncertainty associated with assessments of the sustainability of turtle dove hunting will require improved information on (in order of decreasing importance) current levels of hunting, adult survival, age structure and population size.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© BirdLife International, 2019
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map showing European countries included in the western flyway (in grey). Only the northern third of Italy was taken into account.

Figure 1

Table 1. Number of turtle doves harvested (legal hunting) in European countries located under the western flyway. In all countries but Italy, hunting bags were obtained during the 2013–2014 hunting season. Data for France, Portugal and Italy are from Fisher et al. (2018). Spanish hunting bag is from Arroyo et al. (2018).

Figure 2

Table 2. Estimated turtle dove breeding population sizes in 2013 for countries located in the Western European flyway. For Italy, the area under concern covered 21% of national territory (northern part); we therefore applied this ratio to the national population size used in our approach (33,335–66,670). All population sizes are indicated as 103 breeding pairs.

Figure 3

Table 3. Maximum harvestable population fraction (P) and sustainability index (SI) obtained using f values of 0.1, 0.2, 0.3. Each geographic group (with or without northern Italy) includes 4 trials in which P is calculated both for lower and upper estimation of population size and for low (P1) and high (P2) values of λmax.

Figure 4

Table 4. Mean and SD estimates of sustainability parameters from the sensitivity analysis. Results are shown for the two survival estimates. With λmax: maximum population growth rate, P: potential maximum harvestable population fraction (with f = 0.2), SI: sustainability index.

Figure 5

Table 5. Sensitivities of the sustainability parameters (λmax, P and SI) to uncertainty in the values of adult survival, age at first breeding, population size, age distribution and hunting bag. Table entries show the proportional contribution of the variance of each entry parameter (So, a, N, q, n) to the variance of the derived parameters (λmax , P, SI). λmax: maximum population growth rate, P: potential maximum harvestable population fraction, SI: sustainability index, So: adult survival.

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