Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
Wolves have large spatial requirements and their expansion in Europe is occurring over
national boundaries, hence the need to develop monitoring programs at the population level. Wolves
in the Alps are defined as a functional population and management unit. The range of this wolf Alpine
population now covers seven countries: Italy, France, Austria, Switzerland, Slovenia, Liechtenstein
and Germany, making the development of a joint and coordinated monitoring program particularly
challenging. In the framework of the Wolf Alpine Group (WAG), researchers developed uniform
criteria for the assessment and interpretation of field data collected in the frame of different national
monitoring programs. This standardization allowed for data comparability across borders and the
joint evaluation of distribution and consistency at the population level. We documented the increase
in the number of wolf reproductive units (packs and pairs) over 21 years, from 1 in 1993–1994 up
to 243 units in 2020–2021, and examined the pattern of expansion over the Alps. This long-term
and large-scale approach is a successful example of transboundary monitoring of a large carnivore population that, despite administrative fragmentation, provides robust indexes of population size
and distribution that are of relevance for wolf conservation and management at the transnational
Alpine scale.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
population; wolves; Alpine; estimate; monitoring; transboundary
Elenco autori:
Marucco, Francesca; Reinhardt, Ilka; Avanzinelli, Elisa; Zimmermann, Fridolin; Manz, Ralph; Potočnik, Hubert; Černe, Rok; Rauer, Georg; Walter, Theresa; Knauer, Felix; Chapron, Guillaume; Duchamp, Christophe
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