French
countryside sees alarming 'collapse' of bird populations
Bird
populations across an eerily quiet French countryside have collapsed,
on average, by a third over the last decade-and-a-half, alarmed
researchers reported on Tuesday.
20
March, 2018
Dozens
of species have seen their numbers decline, in some cases by
two-thirds, the scientists detailed in a pair of studies, one
national in scope and the other covering a large agricultural region
in central France.
"The
situation is catastrophic," said Benoit Fontaine, a conservation
biologist at France's National Museum of Natural History and
co-author of one of the studies.
"Our
countryside is in the process of become a veritable desert," he
said in a communique released by the National Centre for Scientific
Research (CNRS), which also contributed to the findings.
The
common white throat, the ortolan bunting, the Eurasian skylark and
other once-ubiquitous species have all fallen off by at least a
third,
according
a detailed, annual census initiated at the start of the century.
A
migratory song bird, the meadow pipit, has declined by nearly 70
percent.
The
culprit, researchers speculate, is the intensive use of pesticides on
vast tracts of monoculture crops, especially wheat and corn.
The
problem is not that birds are being poisoned, but that the insects on
which they depend for food have disappeared.
"There
are hardly any insects left, that's the number one problem,"
said Vincent Bretagnolle, a CNRS ecologist at the Centre for
Biological Studies in
Chize.
Recent
research, he noted, has uncovered similar trends across Europe,
estimating that flying insects have declined by 80 percent, and bird
populations
has dropped by more than 400 million in 30 years.
In
France, data crossed from the two studies -- one national, one
regional -- also suggested industrial-scale agriculture was to blame.
"What
is really alarming, is that all the birds in an agricultural setting
are declining at the same speed, even 'generalist' birds," which
also thrive
in
other settings such as wooded areas, said Bretagnolle.
"That
shows that the overall quality of the agricultural ecosystem is
deteriorating."
Figures
from the national survey -- which relies on a network of hundreds of
volunteer ornithologists -- indicate that the overall decline
intensified in 2016 and 2017.
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