The European Commission adopted on 20 May a report providing the most comprehensive picture yet on the State of Nature in the EU. The findings show that the majority of birds have a secure status, and some species and habitats are doing better. Targeted conservation actions have brought successes, but much greater effort is required for the situation to improve significantly.
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The report is the first assessment to cover both the Birds and Habitats Directives, and it results from the largest collaborative data-collection and assessment of nature ever undertaken across the Member States in the period 2007-2012.
Looking at birds, the report concludes that more than half of all wild bird species assessed (52%) have a secure status. However, around 17% of the species are still threatened and another 15% are near threatened, declining or depleted. This includes once common farmland species like the Skylark, Alauda arvensis and the Black Tailed Godwit Limosa limosa.
Looking at other species protected under the Habitats Directive, almost a quarter (23%) have a favourable assessment. However, over half (60%) are still in an unfavourable status (with 42% considered to be unfavourable-inadequate and 18% unfavourable-bad). Grasslands, wetlands and dune habitats are of particular concern.
Status of EU habitats and species
Population Status (2008-2012) |
BIRDS
|
|
Conservation Status (2007-2012) |
SPECIES
|
HABITATS
|
Secure |
52% |
|
Favourable |
23% |
16% |
Near threatened, declining or depleted |
15% |
|
Unfavourable – inadequate |
42% |
47% |
Threatened |
17% |
|
Unfavourable – bad |
18% |
30% |
Unknown or not evaluated |
16% |
|
Unknown |
17% |
7% |
Habitat types, on the whole, show a worse conservation status and trend than species, as only 16% of habitat-assessments are favourable. The overwhelming majority of habitats have an unfavourable status, with 47% of the assessments being unfavourable-inadequate and 30% being unfavourable-bad.
The main threats to habitats identified are certain agricultural practices (including modification of cultivation practices, over-grazing, abandonment of pastoral systems, fertilisation and pesticides), and human-induced “modifications of natural conditions – (mostly relating to hydrological changes).
The report also presents success stories of targeted conservation action led by the EU. The Bearded Vulture Gypaetus barbatus and the White-headed Duck Oxyura leucocephala both have EU Species Action Plans, and benefitted from the EU LIFE Fund, and their numbers have seen substantial improvements. The EU Natura 2000 network of protected areas, which is 18% of the EU’s land area and is the largest network of protected areas in the world, has also had an important positive influence on the conservation status of species and habitat types.
Background
Every six years, Member States report on the conservation status of species and habitat types protected under the EU Directives. The report covers all wild bird species (about 240), 231 habitat types and more than 1200 other species of EU interest. This ‘State of Nature in the EU’ report is supported by a more detailed technical report prepared by the European Environment Agency, which also includes country-specific data. The reports serve as input to the coming Mid-Term Review of the EU Biodiversity Strategy. The findings of the report will also feed into the ongoing Fitness Check of the Birds and Habitats, which is part of a broader exercise of taking stock of EU legislation to ensure that it is fit for purpose.
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