4.4 Article

Anthropogenic influences on habitat use by African houbaras Chlamydotis undulata on Lanzarote, Canary Islands

Journal

JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION
Volume 68, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnc.2022.126231

Keywords

Bustard; Display; Desert; Farmland; Distribution; Abundance; Disturbance

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The African Houbara is an endangered bird species in North Africa. Its population is threatened by unsustainable hunting and the use of captive-bred birds. While a small population on the Canary Islands is protected, extensive land-use change due to tourism is a concern. A study was conducted to identify measures to conserve this important population, with a focus on the El Jable region of northern Lanzarote. The study found that houbara abundance was influenced by land use, particularly the presence of agricultural gardens, while male displays were positively correlated with the proportion of long-abandoned farmland.
African Houbara Chlamydotis undulata is threatened in North Africa by unsustainable hunting and massive overuse of captive-bred birds to replace wild losses. A small population on the Canary Islands is protected from these threats, but the archipelago is economically dependent on tourism which has led to extensive land-use change, particularly close to the coasts. We investigated the drivers of houbara distribution and abundance in and around the large semi-desert El Jable region of northern Lanzarote in order to identify potential measures to conserve this important population. All houbaras seen during point counts in the centre of 30 tetrads (2 km x 2 km) were recorded, along with their location. We used negative binomial regression to evaluate the effects of land use and human activity on the abundance of birds at tetrad scale. At finer scale we used logistic regression to assess the effect of land use on the distribution of displaying males. We recorded 196 houbara sightings on our surveys, although only 10 males were observed displaying. Houbara abundance had a quadratic relationship with the proportion of huerta (agricultural gardens) in a tetrad. The distribution of male displays was positively related to the proportion of long-abandoned farmland within a 100 m radius of their display site. African Houbaras favour the vicinity of small-scale agriculture and abandoned farmland, but avoid areas with higher levels of human land-use. Reduction of extensive land-use change and disturbance in El Jable are key conservation measures.

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