Influence of Anthropogenic Activities on Avian Scavengers Conservation
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Environmental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 September 2021) | Viewed by 17531
Special Issue Editor
Interests: conservation biology; ecology; birds; ecotoxicology; pathogens; evolution; raptors; parrots; corvids; behavioral ecology; population dynamics; population trends; pharmaceuticals; conservation management; wildlife
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Avian scavengers include one of the most threatened functional groups worldwide (vultures) as well as various more abundant and successful species (e.g., kites, other raptors, corvids) depending on the geographical region. The main anthropogenic threats for these species include direct persecution by poisoning and shooting, collision and electrocution with electric infrastructures and wind‐farms, dietary pollutants (e.g., veterinary drugs), environmental contamination, reduction and alteration of food resources, and health problems derived or influenced by these factors. The link between food resources, contamination, health, and mortality is clear in scavenger species because these threats may concur due to human activities. For instance, food availability (carrion) might be subjected to changes related to socioeconomic shifts in livestock production and management providing carcasses (e.g., the abandonment of traditional farming practices), rewilding processes (e.g., increase of wild ungulate populations), sanitary regulations (e.g., those governing the elimination of livestock carcasses and supplementary feeding programs), and intentional and unintentional mortality. These and other current alterations of natural processes and ecosystems can have a profound influence on avian scavengers by driving demography, health, and key population parameters (e.g., numbers, age structure, reproductive performance) ultimately determining population dynamics and conservation.
Papers addressing the links between the above-cited anthropogenic threats and conservation of avian scavengers are invited for this Special Issue, especially those combining a high academic standard with a practical focus on providing management solutions.
Dr. Guillermo Blanco
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- avian scavengers
- food resources
- contamination
- health
- persecution
- collision
- pathogens
- population dynamics
- management
- conservation
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