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izvor podataka: crosbi

Wild boar populations up, number of hunters down? A review of trends and implications for Europe (CROSBI ID 213725)

Prilog u časopisu | pregledni rad (znanstveni) | međunarodna recenzija

Massei, Giovanna ; Kindberg, Jonas ; Licoppe, Alain ; Gačić, Dragan ; Šprem, Nikica ; Kamler, Jiri ; Baubet, Eric ; Hohmann, Ulf ; Monaco, Andrea ; Ozoliņš, Janis et al. Wild boar populations up, number of hunters down? A review of trends and implications for Europe // Pest management science, 71 (2015), 4; 492-500. doi: 10.1002/ps.3965

Podaci o odgovornosti

Massei, Giovanna ; Kindberg, Jonas ; Licoppe, Alain ; Gačić, Dragan ; Šprem, Nikica ; Kamler, Jiri ; Baubet, Eric ; Hohmann, Ulf ; Monaco, Andrea ; Ozoliņš, Janis ; Cellina, sandra ; Podgórski, Tomasz ; Fonseca, Carlos ; Markov, Nickolay ; Pokorny , Boštjan ; Rosell, Carme ; Náhlik, András

engleski

Wild boar populations up, number of hunters down? A review of trends and implications for Europe

Across Europe wild boar numbers increased in the 1960s-1970s but stabilised in the1980s ; recent evidence suggests that numbers and impact of wild boar grew steadily since the 1980s. As hunting is the main cause of mortality for this species, we reviewed wild boar hunting bags and hunter population trends in 18 European countries from 1982 to 2012. Hunting statistics and numbers of hunters were used as indicators of animal numbers and hunting pressure. The results confirmed that wild boar increased consistently throughout Europe whilst the number of hunters remained relatively stable or declined in most countries. We conclude that recreational hunting is insufficient to limit wild boar population growth and that the relative impact of hunting on wild boar mortality had decreased. Other factors, such as mild winters, reforestation, intensification of crop production, supplementary feeding and compensatory population responses of wild boar to hunting pressure might also explain population growth. As populations continue to grow, more human-wild boar conflicts are expected unless this trend is reversed. New interdisciplinary approaches are urgently required to mitigate human-wild boar conflicts that are otherwise destined to grow further.

growth rate ; hunting pressure ; mortality ; population contro l ; Sus scrofa

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Podaci o izdanju

71 (4)

2015.

492-500

objavljeno

1526-498X

1526-4998

10.1002/ps.3965

Povezanost rada

Poljoprivreda (agronomija)

Poveznice
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