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Unravelling migration connectivity reveals unsustainable hunting of the declining ortolan bunting

Authors :
Jiguet, Frédéric
Robert, Alexandre
Lorrillière, Romain
Hobson, Keith A.
Kardynal, Kevin J.
Arlettaz, Raphaël
Bairlein, Franz
Belik, Viktor
Bernardy, Petra
Copete, José Luis
Czajkowski, Michel Alexandre
Dale, Svein
Dombrovski, Valery
Ducros, Delphine
Efrat, Ron
Elts, Jaanus
Ferrand, Yves
Marja, Riho
Minkevicius, Simonas
Olsson, Peter
Pérez, Marc
Piha, Markus
Raković, Marko
Schmaljohann, Heiko
Seimola, Tuomas
Selstam, Gunnar
Siblet, Jean-Philippe
Skierczyǹski, Michał
Sokolov, Alexandr
Sondell, Jan
Moussy, Caroline
Publisher :
American Association for the Advancement of Science

Abstract

In France, illegal hunting of the endangered ortolan bunting Emberiza hortulana has been defended for the sake of tradition and gastronomy. Hunters argued that ortolan buntings trapped in southwest France originate from large and stable populations across the whole of Europe. Yet, the European Commission referred France to the Court of Justice of the European Union (EU) in December 2016 for infringements to legislation (IP/16/4213). To better assess the impact of hunting in France, we combined Pan-European data from archival light loggers, stable isotopes, and genetics to determine the migration strategy of the species across continents. Ortolan buntings migrating through France come from northern and western populations, which are small, fragmented and declining. Population viability modeling further revealed that harvesting in southwest France is far from sustainable and increases extinction risk. These results provide the sufficient scientific evidence for justifying the ban on ortolan harvesting in France.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........78ab9053f2b32d9e257273ee1d8ca037