March 5,
2019, University
of Reading
The adder
could all but disappear from the UK countryside by 2032, according to new
research conducted with the help of citizen scientists.
The
findings, published in the Herpetological Journal, are the culmination of
11 years of nationwide monitoring and showed that 90 percent of adder
populations surveyed were declining. Experts warn that, if these trends
continue, within just 10-20 years adders could be restricted to just a handful
of sites in the UK.
The adder
is a conservation priority species in the UK. Although concern has been growing
among reptile experts for decades that our native adder populations are in
decline, this study is the first time that national adder population trends
have been measured, and the data confirm that our adders are in serious
trouble.
The data
were collected by Amphibian and Reptile Groups of the UK (ARG UK) through the
'Make the Adder Count' project, a citizen science survey to monitor adder
populations across the UK, which was set up in 2005. Each spring, volunteer
surveyors visit their local adder sites to count the numbers of animals, in
order to assess whether populations are changing. Dr. Emma Gardner, a
researcher from the University of Reading, has analysed the first 11 years of
monitoring data.
"Our
analysis shows that 90 percent of the sites surveyed have small populations and
on average these small populations are declining." said Dr. Gardner.
"When surveyors visit these sites, they typically record less than 10
adders. Only 10 percent of sites have large populations, which seem to be doing
ok. If these trends continue, within 10-20 years, adders will be restricted to
just a few sites in the UK, significantly increasing the extinction risk for
this priority species in Britain."
This is
not just bad for adders. Adders are an indicator species. If adders are in
serious decline, this suggests many other species who depend on the same
habitats are likely to be suffering too. So why are so many adder populations
in decline and what can we do about it? The study also identified key threats
currently affecting the adder sites. Top of the list was public pressure
through disturbance.
"Almost
half of the adder sites surveyed reported public pressure through disturbance
as negatively affecting their adders." said Dr. Gardner. "This ranged
from people inadvertently trampling vegetation, to off-lead dogs disturbing the
adders and people getting too close trying to photograph them. We know that there
are some sites were adders live perfectly happily alongside people, so we
really need more research to assess the impacts of disturbance on adders and
identify what conditions are needed to allow both adders and people to enjoy
the same spaces together.
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