The data shown in this article are the number and proportion of deaths attributable to hunting/trapping, powerline collisions and natural causes in migratory Asian houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii originating from a breeding population in Uzbekistan. For wild adult and juvenile Asian houbara wintering in Central Asia during the period 2011–2018, 53.9% and 52.9%, respectively, of mortality was due to hunting/trapping, while in contrast most mortality in captive-bred released birds was natural with only 23.3% attributable to hunting/trapping. In winter, only one instance of powerline mortality was confirmed (6.0%). For wild adults, 23.0% of mortality during the summer was due to hunting/trapping, while 30.7% was due to powerline collisions. Thi...
A high immediate mortality rate of released animals is an important cause of translocation failure (...
Please read abstract in the article.The National Research Foundation of South Africahttps://onlineli...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record....
The data shown in this article are the number and proportion of deaths attributable to hunting/trapp...
To evaluate the potential contribution of captive breeding to the conservation of exploited migrator...
African houbara (Chlamydotis undulata) and Asian houbara (C. macqueenii), classified as Vulnerable o...
For migratory species, the success of population reintroduction or reinforcement through captive-bre...
For a species threatened with exploitation, before embarking on ex situ measures such as population ...
Extrinsic mortality has a strong impact on the evolution of life-histories, prey morphology and beha...
Maintaining appropriate migratory strategies is important in conservation; however, translocations o...
1. Information about when and where animals die is important to understand population regulation. In...
4noDelayed maturity and low reproductive rate make raptors naturally sensitive to high mortality rat...
Hunting is a major driver of biodiversity loss, but a systematic large-scale estimate of hunting-ind...
1. Mist-netting is the most commonly used method for catching birds for scientific ringing but, desp...
ABSTRACT Mortality estimates are needed of birds and bats killed by wind turbines because wind power...
A high immediate mortality rate of released animals is an important cause of translocation failure (...
Please read abstract in the article.The National Research Foundation of South Africahttps://onlineli...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record....
The data shown in this article are the number and proportion of deaths attributable to hunting/trapp...
To evaluate the potential contribution of captive breeding to the conservation of exploited migrator...
African houbara (Chlamydotis undulata) and Asian houbara (C. macqueenii), classified as Vulnerable o...
For migratory species, the success of population reintroduction or reinforcement through captive-bre...
For a species threatened with exploitation, before embarking on ex situ measures such as population ...
Extrinsic mortality has a strong impact on the evolution of life-histories, prey morphology and beha...
Maintaining appropriate migratory strategies is important in conservation; however, translocations o...
1. Information about when and where animals die is important to understand population regulation. In...
4noDelayed maturity and low reproductive rate make raptors naturally sensitive to high mortality rat...
Hunting is a major driver of biodiversity loss, but a systematic large-scale estimate of hunting-ind...
1. Mist-netting is the most commonly used method for catching birds for scientific ringing but, desp...
ABSTRACT Mortality estimates are needed of birds and bats killed by wind turbines because wind power...
A high immediate mortality rate of released animals is an important cause of translocation failure (...
Please read abstract in the article.The National Research Foundation of South Africahttps://onlineli...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this record....