BirdLife: The Magazine April-June 2019 | Page 10

IRREPLACEABLE Doñana National Park Andalucía, Spain uring the migration season, hundreds of thousands of birds descend upon Doñana National Park in Andalucía, Spain. These thousands of European and African birds all flock to Doñana, an area of low-lying marshes, shallow streams, and rolling sand dunes, to rest, refuel and breed. Throughout the course of the year, more than 300 different species of birds can be seen in the park, including White-headed Duck Oxyura leucocephala, Spanish Imperial Eagle Aquila adalberti and Little Bustard Tetrax tetrax. The largest nature reserve in Europe, Doñana has been declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO, a Ramsar site, and is part of the Guadalquivir marshes – identified by BirdLife as an Important Bird and Biodiversity Area (IBA). D Unfortunately, numerous dangers currently threaten these vital wetlands, and the birds that depend on them, according to a recent report by SEO/BirdLife Spain. The principle of these threats is over-intensive irrigation: the groundwater underneath Doñana is tapped both for wells and to irrigate surrounding farms. However, the illegal exploitation of these aquifers to irrigate out-of-season strawberries and blueberries is causing unsustainable water usage that threatens the marshes. The situation is so extreme that half the systemically monitored threatened birds in Doñana are showing a downward trend, and some species, like the Marbled Teal Marmaronetta angustirostris, are running a serious risk of extinction. Others, such as the Ferruginous Duck Aythya nyroca, are already considered to be locally extinct. o Ph W I L D In response, SEO/BirdLife is urging the Government of Spain (the State Party to the World Heritage Convention) to declare Doñana’s aquifers globally overexploited, to shut down all illegal water tapping, and to ensure that a programme is in place to stop the illegal abstraction of ground water. If these problems are not addressed, Doñana will continue to lose biodiversity at an alarming rate, not to mention the pristine expanse of natural beauty that is the park itself. 10 to Bu d B O A R Sus scrofa Wild Boar are a natural threat to the birds of Doñana as they eat both the eggs and chicks of dozens of species that nest on or near ground level. In 2017, nearly 800 Purple Heron Ardea purpurea nests were predated, as were practically all the of Whiskered Tern Chlidonias hybrida breeding colonies. BIRDLIFE BIRDLIFE • • OCT-DEC APR-JUN 2018 2019