IBERIAN LYNX INJURED IN SPANISH NATIONAL PARK


Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2006

19 Jul 2006 - Huelva, Spain – An endangered Iberian lynx injured in a car accident has become the latest casualty of an illegal road passing through the Doñana National Park in southern Spain, prompting WWF to call on the Andalusian government to implement a road-building moratorium through the lynx's habitat.

After mixed reports that the four-year-old lynx may have had two kittens this season, authorities are now searching for the offspring. The injured lynx is thought to be one of the five to ten breeding females left in the region. It is not certain that the kittens exist, but the search continues because if they do they would die without their mother.

WWF-Spain has been working for the closure of the road between Villamanrique de la Condesa and El Rocio, which cuts through the breeding territory of the Iberian lynx and carries traffic travelling at up to 120km/h. Traffic on the road is increasing, mainly because residents of Sevilla use it to avoid traffic on main roads as they travel to the beaches of Matalascanas and Mazagon.

“It is unthinkable that lynx continue dying on the roads in Doñana,” said Luis Suárez, Head of the Species Programme at WWF-Spain.

“It’s unacceptable to see the increasing mortality every year due to habitat fragmentation, and ineffective management and the authorities' inability to protect breeding adults.”

The latest lynx was injured just as WWF-Spain, together with local environmental group Ecologists in Action, received word from the European Commission that its complaint about the illegal road passing through the national park will be heard by the European Court of Justice if Spain cannot provide a satisfactory solution to the problem. The EC has previously ruled that the road contravened its Environmental Impact Directive and its Habitat Directive.

WWF-Spain believes the road is having a devastating effect on the area’s dwindling Iberian lynx population. Since 2000, 16 lynx have died on the roads in Doñana, close to one-third of the total number of lynx there. Only 20–25 lynx are believed to live in Doñana.

The Iberian lynx (Lynx Pardinus) is the world’s most endangered feline species with fewer than 100 believed to exist in the wild.

During the last year, eight lynx in Doñana died, three of them on the roads. From 1982–89, vehicles were responsible for 19.2 per cent of lynx deaths in the area, but from 11000–99 this rose to 41.7 per cent. Since 2000 has risen to 55.5 per cent.

The recently injured lynx is currently being held in the Captivity Breeding Centre of El Acebuche, suffering broken bones but no internal injuries. It was found after the driver of the car that hit it notified the police.
Luis Suarez

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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