Sanz-Aguilar, A.; Igual, J.M.; Tavecchia, G.; Genovart, M; Oro, D. 2016. When immigration mask threats: 
The rescue effect of a Scopoli’s shearwater colony in the Western Mediterranean as a case study. Biological Conservation, 198, 33–36. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2016.03.034
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| Photo: M. Gomila | 
Abstract: Populations of long-lived species are highly sensitive to increases in 
mortality, but a loss of breeders can be compensated for by recruitment 
of local individuals or immigrants. Populations maintained through 
immigration can be sinks, jeopardizing the viability of the 
metapopulation in the long term when additive mortality from 
anthropogenic impacts occurs. Thus, the correct identification of 
whether a breeding population is maintained by local recruitment or by 
immigration is of special importance for conservation purposes. We 
developed robust population models to disentangle the importance of 
local recruitment and immigration in the dynamics of a Western 
Mediterranean population of Scopoli's shearwater 
Calonectris diomedea
 showing low adult survival but stable breeding numbers. Our results 
show that the shearwater population is not self-maintained but rescued 
by immigration: yearly immigrants recruiting in the population 
represents ~ 10–12% of total population size. We believe that this 
situation may be common to other Western Mediterranean populations, 
currently acting as sinks. We recommend urgent demographic studies at 
large core colonies to evaluate the global conservation status of the 
species. 
  
A press release of the publication has just appeared. You can read the spanish version 
here
 
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