Standards for documenting and monitoring bird reintroduction projects

It would be much easier to assess the effectiveness of different reintroduction methods, and so improve the success of reintroductions, if there was greater standardization in documentation of the methods and outcomes. We suggest a series of standards for documenting and monitoring the methods and o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Conservation letters 2010-08, Vol.3 (4), p.229-235
Hauptverfasser: Sutherland, William J., Armstrong, Doug, Butchart, Stuart H. M, Earnhardt, Joanne M., Ewen, John, Jamieson, Ian, Jones, Carl G., Lee, Rebecca, Newbery, Peter, Nichols, James D., Parker, Kevin A., Sarrazin, François, Seddon, Philip J., Shah, Nirmal, Tatayah, Vikash
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container_end_page 235
container_issue 4
container_start_page 229
container_title Conservation letters
container_volume 3
creator Sutherland, William J.
Armstrong, Doug
Butchart, Stuart H. M
Earnhardt, Joanne M.
Ewen, John
Jamieson, Ian
Jones, Carl G.
Lee, Rebecca
Newbery, Peter
Nichols, James D.
Parker, Kevin A.
Sarrazin, François
Seddon, Philip J.
Shah, Nirmal
Tatayah, Vikash
description It would be much easier to assess the effectiveness of different reintroduction methods, and so improve the success of reintroductions, if there was greater standardization in documentation of the methods and outcomes. We suggest a series of standards for documenting and monitoring the methods and outcomes associated with reintroduction projects for birds. Key suggestions are: documenting the planned release before it occurs, specifying the information required on each release, postrelease monitoring occurring at standard intervals of 1 and 5 years (and 10 for long‐lived species), carrying out a population estimate unless impractical, distinguishing restocked and existing individuals when supplementing populations, and documenting the results. We suggest these principles would apply, largely unchanged, to other vertebrate classes. Similar methods could be adopted for invertebrates and plants with appropriate modification. We suggest that organizations publically state whether they will adopt these approaches when undertaking reintroductions. Similar standardization would be beneficial for a wide range of topics in environmental monitoring, ecological studies, and practical conservation.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2010.00113.x
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1755-263X
language eng
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source Wiley-Blackwell Open Access Titles
subjects Birds
Climate change
Conservation
Ecological monitoring
Ecological studies
Endangered & extinct species
Environmental monitoring
evidence-based conservation
Invertebrates
Islands
Population
Protocol
Reintroduction
Standardization
Success
translocation
Vertebrates
title Standards for documenting and monitoring bird reintroduction projects
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