Predicted decline in common bird and butterfly species despite conservation policies in Europe

Stanislas Rigal, Maxime Lenormand, Léa Tardieu, Ainārs Auniņš, Tristan Bakx, Mattia Brambilla, Lluis Brotons, Tomasz Chodkiewicz, Benoît Fontaine, Zdenek Faltynek Fric, Anna Gamero, Sergi Herrando, John Atle Kålås, Johannes Kamp, Petras Kurlavičienė, Mikko Kuussaari, Aleksi Lehikoinen, Dirk Maes, Xavier Mestdagh, Martin Musche, Ingar Jostein Øien, Lars Pettersson, Jiří Reif, Johannes Markus Rüdisser, Martina Šašić, Reto Schmucki, Constanti Stefanescu, Bård Gunnar Stokke, Nicolas Strebel, Nicolas Titeux, Sven Trautmann, Chris Van Swaay, Sandra Luque

公開日: 2025/9/22

Abstract

In response to increasing threats to biodiversity, conservation objectives have been set at national and international level, with the aim of halting biodiversity decline by reducing direct anthropogenic pressures on species. However, the potential effects of conservation policies derived from these objectives on common species remain rarely studied. Common species are often not the primary species targeted by conservation measures and can be distributed across a wide range of habitats that may be affected differently by these measures. We analyse the effect of a range of pressures related to climate, land use and land use intensity, on 263 common bird and 144 common butterfly species from more than 20,000 sites between 2000 and 2021 across 26 European countries. We use land-use and land-use-intensity change scenarios produced previously using the IPBES Nature Futures Framework to support the achievement of conservation objectives, as well as climate change scenarios in order to project the future of biodiversity pressures in Europe up to 2050. To project the future of common biodiversity in these scenarios, we translate these pressure changes into expected variations of abundances for all common bird and butterfly species, as well as for the multi-species indicators used to monitor common biodiversity status in Europe. The projected trends are improved, while still declining, for birds in particular farmland species under the scenarios that meet the conservation objectives, with few effects on butterflies. No scenario shows a stop or a reversal in the decline in abundance of bird and butterfly species that are currently common, on the time scale considered. Our results therefore call into question the fate of common biodiversity under the current conservation policies and the need for other anticipatory frameworks that do not implicitly require a growing need for natural resources.