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A Synthesis of Human-related Avian Mortality in Canada

机译:加拿大与人类有关的禽类死亡率的综合报告

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Many human activities in Canada kill wild birds, yet the relative magnitude of mortality from different sources and the consequent effects on bird populations have not been systematically evaluated. We synthesize recent estimates of avian mortality in Canada from a range of industrial and other human activities, to provide context for the estimates from individual sources presented in this special feature. We assessed the geographic, seasonal, and taxonomic variation in the magnitude of national-scale mortality and in population-level effects on species or groups across Canada, by combining these estimates into a stochastic model of stage-specific mortality. The range of estimates of avian mortality from each source covers several orders of magnitude, and, numerically, landbirds were the most affected group. In total, we estimate that approximately 269 million birds and 2 million nests are destroyed annually in Canada, the equivalent of over 186 million breeding individuals. Combined, cat predation and collisions with windows, vehicles, and transmission lines caused > 95% of all mortality; the highest industrial causes of mortality were the electrical power and agriculture sectors. Other mortality sources such as fisheries bycatch can have important local or species-specific impacts, but are relatively small at a national scale. Mortality rates differed across species and families within major bird groups, highlighting that mortality is not simply proportional to abundance. We also found that mortality is not evenly spread across the country; the largest mortality sources are coincident with human population distribution, while industrial sources are concentrated in southern Ontario, Alberta, and southwestern British Columbia. Many species are therefore likely to be vulnerable to cumulative effects of multiple human-related impacts. This assessment also confirms the high uncertainty in estimating human-related avian mortality in terms of species involved, potential for population-level effects, and the cumulative effects of mortality across the landscape. Effort is still required to improve these estimates, and to guide conservation efforts to minimize direct mortality caused by human activities on Canada
机译:加拿大的许多人类活动杀死了野生鸟类,但是尚未系统评估来自不同来源的相对死亡率及其对鸟类种群的影响。我们综合了一系列工业活动和其他人类活动对加拿大禽类死亡的最新估计,以提供此特殊功能中来自各个来源的估计数的背景。通过将这些估算值组合成阶段特定死亡率的随机模型,我们评估了全国范围内的死亡率幅度以及种群水平对加拿大物种或群体的影响的地理,季节和分类学变化。每种来源对禽类死亡的估算范围涵盖几个数量级,从数量上讲,陆鸟是受影响最大的群体。据我们估计,加拿大总共每年销毁约2.69亿只鸟类和200万个鸟巢,相当于超过1.86亿个繁殖个体。猫的掠食以及与窗户,车辆和传输线的碰撞共同造成超过95%的死亡率;造成工业死亡的最高原因是电力和农业部门。其他死亡率来源,例如渔业兼捕,可能对当地或特定物种产生重要影响,但在全国范围内相对较小。在主要鸟类群中,物种和家庭的死亡率不同,这表明死亡率不仅仅与丰度成正比。我们还发现,死亡率在全国范围内分布不均。最大的死亡率来源与人口分布相吻合,而工业来源则集中在安大略省南部,艾伯塔省和西南不列颠哥伦比亚省。因此,许多物种可能容易受到多种与人类相关的影响的累积影响。这项评估还证实,根据涉及的物种,潜在的种群影响以及整个地区死亡率的累积影响,估算与人类有关的禽类死亡率存在高度不确定性。仍需要努力改善这些估算,并指导保护工作,以最大程度地减少人类活动在加拿大造成的直接死亡率

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