In the last ten years, Guinea has emerged as a
significant exporter of live wild birds to the United Kingdom and
the European Community. This trade has involved a significant
number of birds of prey. Due to concerns over the
sustainability of this trade, some of these species have been
subject to import suspensions into the European Community under
regulations implementing the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES).
This project was initiated by the CITES
Authorities in the UK, in collaboration with the relevant
authorities in Guinea, and aimed to provide a shared and improved
understanding of the current status and distribution in Guinea of
diurnal and nocturnal raptors on which to base assessments of the
sustainability of any trade.
Counts of raptors were undertaken by driving
road transects, supplemented by spot counts, transects on foot and
nocturnal surveys, as a rapid but rigorous and reproducible survey
technique which would provide information on distribution and
relative abundance of birds of prey in Guinea. Information was
gathered opportunistically on other bird species seen and which may
also be subject to trade.
Some 3,635km of road transect were covered,
over 27 days, distributed across the natural regions of Guinea and
covering a representative range of habitats (forest and savanna)
and including rural, urban and protected areas. These road
counts were supplemented by 21km of pedestrian transects in
forested areas and 6 nocturnal surveys. In all, some 47
species of diurnal raptor (equivalent to 76% of the raptor species
known to occur in west Africa) and 2,792 individual raptors were
recorded along with seven species of owl (31 individuals).
The numbers of diurnal raptors included six species of vulture and
12 Palearctic migrants. The four most abundant species recorded
were hooded vulture Necrosyrtes monachus, black kite
Milvus migrans, white-backed vulture Gyps
africanus and grasshopper buzzard Butastur
rufipennis. The survey recorded the first known observations
of Eurasian griffon vulture Gyps fulvus, saker falcon
Falco cherrug and red-chested owlet Glaucidium
tephronotum from Guinea. No African grey parrots Psittacus
erithacus, bustards or hornbills were observed at all.
More species of raptor were recorded from
rural areas (43 spp.) than any other category but this area had the
lowest overall abundance index (62.3 individuals /100km); this land
use type covered most of the survey route. By contrast, urban
areas had the lowest species diversity (11 spp.) but the greatest
abundance index (168.4 ind./100km), indicating that these areas
supported significant numbers of a few species of large raptor.
Notable amongst these urban raptors are the hooded vulture and
black kite. Protected areas had moderate species richness (30 spp.)
and abundance (78.8 ind./100km) but the highest number of species
per transect. Three species, Cassin’s hawk eagle Spizaetus
africanus, crowned eagle Stephanoaetus coronatus and
African hobby Falco cuvierii, were recorded only from
protected areas. By contrast, not a single vulture was
recorded in protected areas.
When analysed by natural region, the Haute
Guinée was the richest natural region with 37 species recorded but
in moderate abundance; it was also the richest region for number of
vulture species and for Palearctic migrants. La Moyenne
Guinée was relatively rich in species (33 spp.) and with an index
of abundance greater than the survey average. It was also the
region where vultures were most abundant (74.4 ind./100km).
La Guinée Forestière was relatively poor in species (28) and had
the lowest abundance index (43.3 ind./100km). La Guinée
Maritime recorded only 15 species but had the greatest abundance
index for raptors (128.3 ind./100km) with hooded vultures being the
most abundant individual species.
The results were compared with those from two
other recent surveys in the region which used similar
methodology. Whilst number of species and indices of
abundance varied, there was generally a broad correspondence
between the surveys. Whilst one survey recorded 49 species of
raptor and the other 40 species, compared with 47 in Guinea by this
survey, the other surveys covered significantly greater distances
than this study, indicating the relative richness of Guinea for
raptors. Notable from this study were the healthy vulture
populations still found in the Fouta Djallon highlands of Guinea,
in contrast to the pattern of decline for vultures and other large
raptors over most of west Africa.