6533b873fe1ef96bd12d56af

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Incorporating spatial structure and stochasticity in endangered Bonelli’s eagle’s population models: implications for conservation and management

Alvaro SoutulloPascual López-lópezPascual López-lópezVicente Urios

subject

EagleMetapopulationsPopulation dynamicsPopulationEndangered speciesMetapopulationDemographic modelsIndividual-based modelsbiology.animalAccipitridaeZoologíaeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationeducation.field_of_studybiologyRaptorsEcologyElasticity analysisbiology.organism_classificationpeople.cause_of_deathElectrocutionAquila fasciataGeographyBonelli's eaglePopulation modelSpainpeopleVortex

description

Population models have played a chief role informing management decisions for the endangered Bonelli’s eagle (Aquila fasciata) in Spain. In this paper, we incorporate spatial structure and stochasticity in the construction of individual-based metapopulation models, and use these models to explore the effects of possible management actions on the persistence of the species in Spain. To build the models we used data on seven sub-populations that have experienced different trends in the last decades, and we introduced new estimates of pre-adult survival rate. The elasticity analysis of our models showed that when the interchange of individuals among sub-populations is taken into account, pre-adult mortality plays the key role in determining the overall population trend. This is in contrast to what it has been suggested by previous demographic models that modelled local populations as isolated. Specifically, a 20% decrease in pre-adult mortality during the first two years of life was enough for the stabilization of the metapopulation (i.e., λ ⩾ 1.0). However, neither a similar decrease in the values of adult mortality, nor an increase in the percentage of breeders, modified the declining trend of our model metapopulation. This reinforces the idea that to ensure the long-term persistence of the species in Spain, management actions should aim at minimizing pre-adult mortality. These include locating and protecting the areas used by juvenile Bonelli’s eagles (e.g., temporary settlements), minimizing the risk of electrocution in power lines, and preventing human persecution. P. López-López is supported by FPU grant of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia (reference AP2005-0874).

10.1016/j.biocon.2008.01.011https://hdl.handle.net/10045/22695