Two steps closer to the
identification of the Aquatic Warbler wintering sites.
As it was reported
earlier, the first important wintering site of the Aquatic Warbler,
Europe’s most threatened migratory songbird, had been discovered in
and around the Djoudj National Park in north-western Senegal.
Estimates of
BirdLife International’s Aquatic Warbler Conservation Team (AWCT)
show that from 5,000 to 15,000 birds winter in Djoudj, therefore
this site could hold up to 60 % of the global population. Of prime
importance is now the question: Are there other important wintering
sites, and where to search for them? If there are more sites, we
have to find these sites quickly in order to be able to protect
them. Otherwise, all the conservation work carried out at the
breeding and stopover sites might stay without effect, if the birds
starve during winter.
Hence, the AWCT
organised a second expedition to Western Africa in January 2008 in
order to investigate a number of potential sites in northern Senegal
and southern Mauritania. Using satellite images, these sites had
been identified, because their water regime was similar to the one
found in the Djoudj National Park. Unfortunately, no Aquatic
Warblers could be found at any of these sites. Some of them are
probably suitable for Aquatic Warblers earlier during the winter
(the dry season of Senegal), but were now dry. Other sites were
clearly unsuitable.
Meanwhile, the
birds were again present in good numbers in the Djoudj area, where a
German PhD student is now researching the habitat needs of the
species in order to identify the best ways how to protect the
species at this site. Here, the team could even catch two birds,
which they had ringed exactly one year ago at the same spot during
the first expedition to Senegal. Since then, both birds had migrated
back to Europe, spend a short breeding season of three months,
hopefully breeding successfully, and flown all the way back to the
same area of grass swamp in Africa.
Back in Europe
the additional information collected at the sites without Aquatic
Warblers (absence information) could be used to refine the
predictive quality of the satellite image analysis. A new map of
potential wintering sites, showing the same kind of vegetation (not
water regime) as the Djoudj National Park has been prepared. This
preliminary analysis indicates such habitat is very limited,
but still potentially sufficient to support the whole world
population, whose breeding sites cover under 1,500 km2. But it is
clear that good wintering habitat for the Aquatic Warbler could soon
become a limiting factor for the species, should more of it become
destroyed.
The AWCT now
plans to check the sites identified in the new satellite study, and
hopefully will be able to confirm more suitable wintering sites at
which conservation action can then be targeted.
For more information contact: Lars Lachmann, AWCT
(lars.lachmann@rspb.org.uk)
|

Global distribution of the Aquatic Warbler ( Flade, 2008)
|