Biases in the Detection of Intentionally Poisoned Animals: Public Health and Conservation Implications from a Field Experiment

Autor/a

Gil Sánchez, José María

Aguilera-Alcalá, Natividad

Moleón, Marcos

Sebastián-González, Esther

Margalida, Antoni

Morales-Reyes, Zebensui

Durà Alemañ, Carlos Javier

Oliva-Vidal, Pilar

Pérez-García, Juan M.

Sánchez-Zapata, José Antonio

Fecha de publicación

2021-02-09T13:48:53Z

2021-02-09T13:48:53Z

2021-01-29



Resumen

Intentional poisoning is a global wildlife problem and an overlooked risk factor for public health. Managing poisoning requires unbiased and high-quality data through wildlife monitoring protocols, which are largely lacking. We herein evaluated the biases associated with current monitoring programmes of wildlife poisoning in Spain. We compared the national poisoning database for the 1990–2015 period with information obtained from a field experiment during which we used camera-traps to detect the species that consumed non-poisoned baits. Our findings suggest that the detection rate of poisoned animals is species-dependent: Several animal groups (e.g., domestic mammalian carnivores and vultures) tended to be over-represented in the poisoning national database, while others (e.g., corvids and small mammals) were underrepresented. As revealed by the GLMM analyses, the probability of a given species being overrepresented was higher for heaviest, aerial, and cryptic species. In conclusion, we found that monitoring poisoned fauna based on heterogeneous sources may produce important biases in detection rates; thus, such information should be used with caution by managers and policy-makers. Our findings may guide to future search efforts aimed to reach a more comprehensive understanding of the intentional wildlife poisoning problem.


N.A.-A. was supported by a pre-doctoral grant (BES-2016-077351) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) and the European Social Found (ESF), M.M. by a Ramón y Cajal research contract from MINECO (RYC-2015-19231), J.M.P.-G. by a Juan de la Cierva research contract from MINECO (IJC2019-038968-I) and E.S.-G. and Z.M.-R. by the Generalitat Valenciana and the ESF (SEJI/2018/024, APOSTD/2019/016). This study was partially funded by MINECO and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through Projects CGL2015-66966-C2-1-2-R, CGL2017-89905-R and RTI2018-099609-B-C21-C22.

Tipo de documento

Artículo
Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias y palabras clave

Human-wildlife conflict; Predator control; Public health; Vultures; Wildlife conservation; Wildlife poisoning

Publicado por

MDPI

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Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18031201

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2021, vol. 18, núm. 3, p. 1201

Derechos

cc-by, (c) Gil Sánchez, José María et al., 2021

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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