WWF TRACKS NEW ARCTIC MIGRATORY ROUTE


Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2006

06 Nov 2006 - Helsinki, Finland – Thanks to advanced satellite tracking, scientists from WWF-Finland and its partners have found a previously unknown migratory route of the lesser white-fronted geese — the most endangered Arctic goose in Eurasia.

Currently routes of the migratory species have been well documented from northern Norway and Finland to Russia’s northern sub-arctic Kanin Peninsula. From there the population splits in two separate directions, with some flying via eastern Hungary towards the Evros River delta on the border of Greece and Turkey, and others heading to northern Kazakhstan and then further south to the Caspian Sea region, even as far south as the Mesopotamian Marshes in Iraq.

But according to new satellite tracking results of three lesser white-fronted geese tagged in Norway last spring as part of an EU LIFE project, it appears that these geese may be flying a previously unknown route from Kazakhstan, heading southwest towards Greece, rather than south to the Caspian region as initially thought.
“The present satellite tracking has provided a lot of new valuable information on the routes of the geese,” said Petteri Tolvanen, a conservation officer with WWF-Finland.
“Mapping the flyways is essential for developing conservation activities aimed at protecting the species.”
The lesser white-fronted goose (Anser erythropus) is currently the most endangered bird in the Nordic countries as a result of hunting and poaching, with only 20–30 breeding pairs remaining in Norway, Sweden and Finland.

The world population is estimated at 25,000.

END NOTES:

• Launched in 1992, the European Union LIFE (The Financial Instrument for the Environment) project is one of the spearheads of the EU's environment policy. Nature conservation projects which contribute to maintaining or restoring natural habitats and/or species populations to a favourable conservation status within the EU's Habitats Directive are eligible for LIFE-Nature. The EU has allocated approximately €700 million for more than 800 LIFE-Nature projects, including satellite tracking of the lesser white-fronted geese.

• The EU Life Nature project for the conservation of the lesser white-fronted goose started in April 2005. The project is run by WWF Finland, with nine more partners, including BirdLife, in Finland, Norway, Estonia, Hungary and Greece.

Petteri Tolvanen, Conservation Coordinator
WWF-Finland

 
 

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