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Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys

Raptors are a group of carnivorous birds experiencing considerable population declines across the globe. Despite these declines, many raptor populations remain poorly monitored across most of their ranges and, as with most biodiversity, this is especially true in developing countries, including most...

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Main Author: Mphetlhe, Rochelle
Other Authors: Amar, Arjun
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mphetlhe, Rochelle
author2 Amar, Arjun
author_browse Amar, Arjun
Mphetlhe, Rochelle
author_facet Amar, Arjun
Mphetlhe, Rochelle
author_sort Mphetlhe, Rochelle
collection Thesis
description Raptors are a group of carnivorous birds experiencing considerable population declines across the globe. Despite these declines, many raptor populations remain poorly monitored across most of their ranges and, as with most biodiversity, this is especially true in developing countries, including most countries within Africa. In Botswana, conservationists are growing increasingly concerned about the population trends of many raptor species, especially vultures. Fortuitously, Botswana has over 55,000 km of raptor road transectsurveys originally conducted between 1991-1995. Over two decades later, researchers repeated some of those surveys (c. 21,000 km) in the northern part of Botswana, which revealed declines across multiple raptor species. To complete these re-surveys at a national level, we undertook a repeat of the raptor transect surveys conducted in the southern half of Botswana, covering c. 22,000 km of transects. We then estimated country-wide abundance changes for all species of regularly occurring raptors by combining these two re-surveys. We explored changes for 30 species, 19 (63%) of which exhibited significant changes. Fifteen species (50%) declined significantly, and 4 (13%) species increased significantly, while 11 species (37%) showed nonsignificant declines. Most species displayed similar population trends between the national analysis and the northern re-surveys. Those re-surveys revealed significant declines in 48% of the 29 species examined. The Lappet-faced Vulture (Torgos tracheliotus) showed significant declines of 61% in the northern re-surveys, but in the national analysis, revealed nonsignificant increases of 27%. White-backed Vultures (Gyps africanus) also revealed significant increases of 28% in the national analysis compared to declines shown in the northern resurveys. Whilst our re-surveys suggestsimilarly worrying trends of many raptor species as the northern re-surveys did, we noted increasing population abundance trends for three of the most threatened vulture species. Future research should explore whether certain environmental data (e.g., human modification, climate change, etc.) are associated with the declines of these species, to better understand the drivers for these declines
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:31:45.395Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Biological Sciences
publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39724 Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys Mphetlhe, Rochelle Amar, Arjun Conservation Biology Raptors are a group of carnivorous birds experiencing considerable population declines across the globe. Despite these declines, many raptor populations remain poorly monitored across most of their ranges and, as with most biodiversity, this is especially true in developing countries, including most countries within Africa. In Botswana, conservationists are growing increasingly concerned about the population trends of many raptor species, especially vultures. Fortuitously, Botswana has over 55,000 km of raptor road transectsurveys originally conducted between 1991-1995. Over two decades later, researchers repeated some of those surveys (c. 21,000 km) in the northern part of Botswana, which revealed declines across multiple raptor species. To complete these re-surveys at a national level, we undertook a repeat of the raptor transect surveys conducted in the southern half of Botswana, covering c. 22,000 km of transects. We then estimated country-wide abundance changes for all species of regularly occurring raptors by combining these two re-surveys. We explored changes for 30 species, 19 (63%) of which exhibited significant changes. Fifteen species (50%) declined significantly, and 4 (13%) species increased significantly, while 11 species (37%) showed nonsignificant declines. Most species displayed similar population trends between the national analysis and the northern re-surveys. Those re-surveys revealed significant declines in 48% of the 29 species examined. The Lappet-faced Vulture (Torgos tracheliotus) showed significant declines of 61% in the northern re-surveys, but in the national analysis, revealed nonsignificant increases of 27%. White-backed Vultures (Gyps africanus) also revealed significant increases of 28% in the national analysis compared to declines shown in the northern resurveys. Whilst our re-surveys suggestsimilarly worrying trends of many raptor species as the northern re-surveys did, we noted increasing population abundance trends for three of the most threatened vulture species. Future research should explore whether certain environmental data (e.g., human modification, climate change, etc.) are associated with the declines of these species, to better understand the drivers for these declines 2024-05-27T08:47:32Z 2024-05-27T08:47:32Z 2023 2024-05-22T08:36:42Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39724 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Mphetlhe, Rochelle
Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
title_full Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
title_fullStr Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
title_short Quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across Botswana using repeat road surveys
title_sort quantifying national abundance changes of raptors across botswana using repeat road surveys
topic Conservation Biology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39724
work_keys_str_mv AT mphetlherochelle quantifyingnationalabundancechangesofraptorsacrossbotswanausingrepeatroadsurveys