Abstract

Bird populations associated with agricultural ecosystems have declined markedly in Europe during the last quarter of the 20th century due to land-use intensification. This has meant that some very common species, in some cases even species considered as pests, are now threatened or subject to management programs to ensure their conservation. Considered pests of crops and predators of small game species, corvids are among the most persecuted common farmland birds. The consideration that these birds are pests lacks any scientific evaluation and is justified by the subjective impression that they are abundant. Here, using estimates of absolute and relative abundances of both the total and the breeding population, we show how jackdaws Corvus monedula have shown a marked negative population trend in central Spain during the last 40 years. Decline involves the loss of multiple colonies, the apparent absence of the species as a breeder in riverside forests, and an overall numerical decrease of about 75% (from 35,000 to 9000 individuals) according to counts in communal roosts. The population decline seems to be more pronounced in areas where land use has been intensified, probably in response to the reduction in the availability of once-abundant food (i.e., invertebrates and weed seeds) but also due to more direct effects such as intoxication and medium to long-term accumulation of agricultural pollutants which may have also affected reproduction and survival. Intensive hunting over decades has undoubtedly contributed to this decline and should therefore be made forbidden urgently. Generally, it seems that high-intensity agricultural management more drastically affects smaller and less adaptable common species, which are expected to decline before and at a higher extent and magnitude than jackdaws. Given that global population estimates based on direct counts of individuals are readily achievable through simultaneous counts in communal roosts, the jackdaw can serve as a model for assessing temporal trends potentially linked to large-scale anthropogenic modifications of open and agricultural environments.

Highlights

  • Our results show a sharp decline of the jackdaw in central Spain during the last decrepresentation trends

  • This trend is evidentof according to all available sources of information for relative

  • Our results show a sharp decline of the jackdaw in central Spain during the last decades

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Summary

Introduction

Birds are suffering unprecedented declines worldwide, and common farmland species are among the most affected groups [1,2]. These species represent key elements in the creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). Farmland bird species provide multiple ecosystem services in key processes for environmental integrity and resilience [5,6,7], and due to their high abundance, they can reflect the biomass that these landscapes can sustain associated to nutrient transfer processes and the functioning of ecological cycles, with cascading effects on food webs [5,8,9,10]. The current strong decline of keystone species in agro-systems poses a paradoxical situation, as some of these species have gone from being so abundant to be considered as crop pests to being threatened to the point of requiring costly conservation management programs [2,16]

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