| Literature DB >> 31858488 |
Alastair Franke1,2, Knud Falk3, Kevin Hawkshaw4, Skip Ambrose5, David L Anderson6, Peter J Bente7, Travis Booms7, Kurt K Burnham8, Johan Ekenstedt9, Ivan Fufachev10, Sergey Ganusevich11, Kenneth Johansen12, Jeff A Johnson13, Sergey Kharitonov14, Pertti Koskimies15, Olga Kulikova16, Peter Lindberg17, Berth-Ove Lindström18, William G Mattox19, Carol L McIntyre20, Svetlana Mechnikova21, Dave Mossop22, Søren Møller23, Ólafur K Nielsen24, Tuomo Ollila25, Arve Østlyngen12, Ivan Pokrovsky26,27,28, Kim Poole29, Marco Restani30, Bryce W Robinson31, Robert Rosenfield32, Aleksandr Sokolov10, Vasiliy Sokolov33, Ted Swem34, Katrin Vorkamp35.
Abstract
The peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) and the gyrfalcon (Falco rusticolus) are top avian predators of Arctic ecosystems. Although existing monitoring efforts are well established for both species, collaboration of activities among Arctic scientists actively involved in research of large falcons in the Nearctic and Palearctic has been poorly coordinated. Here we provide the first overview of Arctic falcon monitoring sites, present trends for long-term occupancy and productivity, and summarize information describing abundance, distribution, phenology, and health of the two species. We summarize data for 24 falcon monitoring sites across the Arctic, and identify gaps in coverage for eastern Russia, the Arctic Archipelago of Canada, and East Greenland. Our results indicate that peregrine falcon and gyrfalcon populations are generally stable, and assuming that these patterns hold beyond the temporal and spatial extents of the monitoring sites, it is reasonable to suggest that breeding populations at broader scales are similarly stable. We have highlighted several challenges that preclude direct comparisons of Focal Ecosystem Components (FEC) attributes among monitoring sites, and we acknowledge that methodological problems cannot be corrected retrospectively, but could be accounted for in future monitoring. Despite these drawbacks, ample opportunity exists to establish a coordinated monitoring program for Arctic-nesting raptor species that supports CBMP goals.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic; CBMP; Falco peregrinus; Falco rusticolus; Long-term trends; Occupancy; Productivity
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31858488 PMCID: PMC6989710 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01300-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129