|
Summit
meeting to protect one of the World’s rarest
songbird - 1st meeting of the Range States of the Aquatic Warbler Memorandum of
Understanding
10.07.2006:
Nations from across Europe
and Africa have come together this week in the Lower Oder Valley National Park
near Berlin in Germany, under the auspices of a United Nations Memorandum of
Understanding, to discuss the future of mainland Europe’s rarest songbird,
the aquatic warbler.
The current world breeding
population of the aquatic warbler has plummeted, since the beginning of the last
century, by 95 per cent to only 16,000 males in just seven countries, making
this robin-sized bird rarer than the African elephant. In the mid 1990s, it was
believed the aquatic warbler could face extinction within the next decade.
The aquatic warbler nests
in the fen mires and wet meadows of eastern central Europe and migrates more
than 5000 kilometres to Africa for the winter. Representatives from 13 countries,
where the bird either nests, migrates through or winters, discussed the
bird’s future at a meeting convened by the Convention on Migratory Species
(CMS).
Robert Hepworth, Executive
Secretary of CMS, said: “The aquatic warbler is the only songbird of
mainland Europe which is facing global extinction. Bringing together scientists
and government decision makers from the species’ range states in Europe
and Africa, and coordinating their work is essential to ensure its survival.”
Faced with the bird’s
imminent extinction, BirdLife International championed this species’ cause
since the mid 90ies, when BirdLife expeditions to under-explored parts of
Belarus discovered the three key breeding sites for the species, which together
hold 60 per cent of the world population.
John O’Sullivan, of
BirdLife International, explained: “Alarmingly, all three sites were
acutely threatened with deterioration and destruction. But a project to restore
these sites, with funding from the UK government and the German Michael Otto
Foundation, has now saved these sites and ensures good breeding success for this
vulnerable bird.”
The meeting concluded, that
the main success of the joint efforts of governments, BirdLife International and
CMS over the past years is the stabilization of the core breeding population of
the species in its largest breeding sites, while the loss of smaller breeding
sites and especially the critical decline of the species’ distinct
population in Pomerania along the German-Polish border is highly alarming.
Work now needs to intensify
in key countries of West Africa, like Senegal, to find the elusive wintering
sites of the species, as this would be critical for the effective protection of
the aquatic warbler throughout its range.
Robert
Hepworth, of CMS, added: “This bird could have a bright future in Europe
and Africa if the right decisions are taken to conserve it. The CMS Memorandum
will provide the basis for governments, other organisations such as BirdLife
International, and scientists to work together to save the aquatic warbler and
its unique habitats.”
|