Scientific Data (Apr 2023)

Five decades of breeding populations census for 12 species of colonial waterbirds in northwestern Italy

  • Mauro Fasola,
  • Daniele Pellitteri-Rosa,
  • Guido Pinoli,
  • Gianfranco Alessandria,
  • Eleonora Boncompagni,
  • Giovanni Boano,
  • Anna Brangi,
  • Franco Carpegna,
  • Pietro Cassone,
  • Mauro Della Toffola,
  • Flavio Ferlini,
  • Alessandra Gagliardi,
  • Arturo Gargioni,
  • Laura Gola,
  • Nunzio Grattini,
  • Marco Gustin,
  • Franco Lavezzi,
  • Lorenzo Maffezzoli,
  • Cesare Martignoni,
  • Roberto Musumeci,
  • Giuliana Pirotta,
  • Ivan Provini,
  • Maurizio Ravasini,
  • Alessandro Re,
  • Bassano Riboni,
  • Alberto Tamietti,
  • Enrico Viganò,
  • Michelangelo Morganti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-023-02072-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Colonial waterbirds, a major biodiversity element occurring in the core of ultra-anthropized Europe, are ideal indicators of the wellness of inland wetlands. Nonetheless, there is a critical knowledge gap in their trend and population status. We present an uninterrupted 47 years-long dataset of the breeding populations of 12 species of colonial waterbirds (Ardeidae, Phalacrocoracidae, Plataleidae, Threskiornitidae) throughout a 58,000 km2 agricultural region in the higher Po basin (NW Italy). A trained team of collaborators censused with standardized field techniques the number of nests of each species at 419 colonies in the 1972–2018 period, summing up a total of 236,316 records. Data cleaning and standardization were performed for each census year, ensuring robust and consistent data. This dataset is among the largest ever collected for a guild of European vertebrates. It has already been used to describe the factors influencing population trends, and still offers opportunities to explore a wide range of key ecological processes such as biological invasions, global change consequences and biodiversity impact of agricultural practices.