Wednesday, 10 August 2016

Protect habitat for billions of birds, urges report



Monday 8 August, 2016

New technologies reveal that many birds fly father, faster, and through more varied routes than previously thought, indicates a new report. The information reinforces the notion that billions of birds migrate from the massive boreal forest that spans northern Canada. It also shows that birds depend on much larger masses of healthy habitat that was previously thought.

The boreal forest is “the breeding ground and the starting point in migration for around three to five billion birds we estimate,” says Kevin Smith, national manager of boreal programs for Ducks Unlimited Canada. “So maintaining the diversity and types of habitat across that area is critically important.”

Time for a new treaty, concludes report
It was 100 years ago that the Migratory Bird Convention was passed. It was a treaty that helped many bird species rebound from near extinction. Conservation groups call it a breakthrough, but say it’s time for another one.

They are calling on the leaders of Canada, the U.S. and Mexico to “develop a vision for the next 100 years of bird conservation.” They would like leaders to protect at least half of the boreal forest and to apply modern standards to developing remaining areas. They also ask that indigenous people play a leading role in conservation efforts and that there be more support for research.


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