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Threat to Iberian Imperial Eagle

ONE of Spain’s most iconic birds of prey, the Iberian Imperial Eagle is at risk of extinction due to the water shortage.

Also known as the Spanish Imperial Eagle, its survival could be at risk due to a lack of water in the protected Doñana area in Andalucia, according to a news source on Wednesday, July 26.

The large raptor is exclusive to the Iberian Peninsula and only lives and breeds in Spanish and Portuguese territory. But SEO/BirdLife has warned that the water shortage Doñana is currently undergoing is bringing one of the national park’s most iconic threatened birds of prey, the Iberian Imperial Eagle, closer to extinction.

In the 1960s the species was listed as ‘critically endangered,’ with only 30 pairs remaining, all located in Spain.

However, thanks to conservation efforts over the years its population in the peninsula as a whole revealed that there were 821 pairs found in Spain and 20 in Portugal in 2021 and 2022.

been one of the priority objectives in the conservation of Doñana’s wildlife, although data from the latest breeding census in 2023 has pointed to a situation of decline.

Of the eight territories occupied in 2023, seven pairs have started breeding, but four of them have failed completely, and of the six chicks born this year, three have died in the nest for various reasons, meaning that have fledged this year in Doñana.

Head of the SEO/BirdLife Technical Office in Doñana, Carlos Davila, said: “Doñana is suffering an unprecedented biodiversity crisis associated with the scarcity of rainfall and, above all, the overexploitation of its water resources, and scientific data are constantly alerting us to the urgency and seriousness of the situation.”

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