Invasive species currently account for a major threat to global biodiversity, and island ecosystems are among the most vulnerable, because of the frequency and success of species introductions on islands. Within Mediterranean islands, reptiles not only are frequently introduced species but are also among the most threatened because of these introductions. The Balearic archipelago is a good example of this, since only two of its current 16 species of reptiles are native. Thirteen years ago, the snake Hemorrhois hippocrepis was introduced by cargo in Ibiza island, and it is in expansion. Individuals obtained from an early eradication campaign showed a fast expression of phenotypic plasticity and acquired larger sizes than those of the source population, probably due to a high prey availability and predator scarcity. The species is thriving at the expense of a small variety of native and non-native prey, but the predation pressure on the endemic Podarcis pityusensis, the only native reptile in the island, is very high, as this lizard represents 56% of the prey in frequency, which might threaten its survival on the long term. Our results on the feeding ecology of the snake are of sufficient concern to justify the maintenance of actions to eradicate this invader.
El presente documento revisa la situación y aporta nuevos datos para las tortugas marinas en España durante el periodo 2013-2018. Se revisa el estado de conservación para el periodo 2013-2018 en cada una de las demarcaciones marítimas españolas: Levante –Baleares y Estrecho-Alborán para el Mediterráneo, y Noratlántica, Sudatlántica y Macaronesia en aguas del océano Atlántico. Se incluyen análisis de tendencias, las presiones y amenazas que afectan a cada especie y bibliografía actualizada. Para Caretta caretta, se recopila la información de los nidos en las costas mediterráneas españolas desde 2013 hasta 2018 y los movimientos de juveniles nacidos en España, tras su liberación.
This document reviews the situation and provides new data for sea turtles in Spain during the period 2013-2018. The conservation status for such period is reviewed in each of the Spanish maritime demarcations: Levante -Baleares and Estrecho-Alborán for the Mediterranean, and Noratlántica, Sudatlántica and Macaronesia in waters of the Atlantic Ocean. Analysis of trends, pressures and threats that affect each species and updated bibliography are included. For Caretta caretta, information is collected on nests on the Spanish Mediterranean coasts from 2013 to 2018 and the movements of juveniles born in Spain, after their release.
En este trabajo se repasa la evolución del programa de Seguimiento de anfibios y reptiles de España (SARE) en el grupo de los anfibios, y se expone las posibles fortalezas y debilidades asociadas a la utilización de una metodología enfocada a la ciencia ciudadana, y más en detalle la ejecución de los muestreos, su calidad y la de los datos obtenidos con ellos.
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