Re: Discussion about migration

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marika.solo
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Re: Discussion about migration

Post by marika.solo »

❓Why Does This Happen?

Scientific research and conservation reports suggest several reasons:
- Some hunters don’t recognize protected species, or they don’t know the law well.
- In some regions, peer pressure or “everyone does it” attitudes make illegal shooting more common.
- Others deliberately ignore the law, assuming they won’t be caught — especially where enforcement is weak.
- In psychological terms, people may use justifications like “it’s just one bird,” “they're not really endangered,” or “I didn’t know.”

🧠 Psychology and Behaviour

- Cruelty or disregard for wildlife is sometimes a sign of low empathy or disrespect for rules.
- Even hunters who see themselves as “ethical” may break laws if they feel the rules are unfair or irrelevant.
- Awareness campaigns and training reduce accidental or careless shootings, especially among new or young hunters.

✅ What Can Be Done

- Stronger enforcement: fast investigation when GPS-tagged birds go silent.
- Education: clear training on protected species, including black storks.
- Culture change: hunters must be part of the solution — not just the problem.
- Cross-border cooperation: black storks migrate — protection must too.

⚠️ Let’s Act Before It Happens In Your Country

🕊️ Every black stork matters.
📡 Every transmitter silenced by a gun is a voice lost.

(I have list of key scientific and conservation sources used)
Lenasylwa
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Joined: 14 Jul 2023, 08:14

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Lenasylwa »

Residents in Germany. (Source: Grell/DJV)

460,771 hunters are active nationwide. This is a new record and an increase of over a third (41 percent) within three decades. Over a fifth (22 percent) of people with hunting licenses in Germany live in North Rhine-Westphalia: 101,924. This marks the first time that a single federal state has exceeded the 100,000 mark. This figure is followed by Bavaria (75,000) and Lower Saxony (70,000). These figures were published today by the German Hunting Association (DJV), based on figures from November 2024.

Statistically, there are now exactly 5.5 hunters per 1,000 inhabitants in Germany – an increase of 38 percent compared to 1994. Relative to the population,Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania has the most hunting license holders, namely 10 per 1,000 people. Lower Saxony (9) follows in second place, followed by Schleswig-Holstein (8).

Controlling and educating such a large number of hunters is difficult. I think there is no solution at the moment.
And these are only data from Germany.
Pavel kunetek
Posts: 47
Joined: 08 Apr 2024, 13:31

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Pavel kunetek »

Velice zajimave Marika,je to tak
marika.solo
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Re: Discussion about migration

Post by marika.solo »

Pavel kunetek wrote: 13 Sep 2025, 17:48
Napísala som Ti súkromnú správu - hore vpravo by Ti to malo svietiť.
Susa
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Joined: 06 Aug 2023, 16:09

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Susa »

Guten Morgen, was meinen Sie Herr Kunetek?
Susa
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Joined: 06 Aug 2023, 16:09

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Susa »

Meinen Sie wollte ich schreiben
Pavel kunetek
Posts: 47
Joined: 08 Apr 2024, 13:31

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Pavel kunetek »

súkromná správa - nie tu to riešme
Pavel kunetek
Posts: 47
Joined: 08 Apr 2024, 13:31

Re: Discussion about migration

Post by Pavel kunetek »

veľká vďaka - prosím len do súkromnej správy - vpavo hore je na stránke
marika.solo
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Re: Discussion about migration

Post by marika.solo »

Lenasylwa wrote: 17 Sep 2025, 17:13 New information!

"A young Black Stork that grew up in the Kergu webcam nest and started migrating on August 17, 2025 with another chick from the same nest (Vihm). The youngest chick (Iksi) was still in the nest at that time. The tracking device was installed on the chicks of this nest as part of the monitoring of the Black Storks of the Tootsi-Sop wind farm impact. According to the transmitter data, the fledged young birds did not fly to the wind farm area either during the flight exercises or during the start of migration. Tootsi and Vihm migrated together for the first two days (including crossing 150 km of the Gulf of Riga), after which their flight paths diverged in Lithuania. Tootsi's migratory instinct leads him to the western migration route, but his migration route ended in northern Germany on September 10. The tracker data showed that Tootsi landed near Greifswald and did not fly again. He walked along the bank of the ditch for a few hours and finally died there. We could only see this from the data the next evening. Our colleague Carsten Rohne drove there the next morning and found Tootsi's remains. They were taken to the Greifswald Zoo and the police were also notified. The police issued a press release that an Estonian black stork had been shot in Germany - their initial observation somehow gave reason for such suspicion. However, Tootsi's body was taken to the Rostock research laboratory, where an autopsy did not identify the shooting, but an attack by a larger bird of prey. The bird of prey was probably an white-tailed eagle, from whose claws Tootsi escaped, but had to give up his life."

Source:https://birdmap.5dvision.ee/EN/2025/aut ... =0&speed=1
marika.solo
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Re: Discussion about migration

Post by marika.solo »

Unfortunately, in such cases, stress alone can be deadly. Predator-induced stress can significantly increase mortality risk, even without direct injuries.

When a bird faces a predator attack (like from a white-tailed eagle), it experiences extreme acute stress, triggering a massive release of stress hormones (mainly corticosterone in birds). This "fight-or-flight" response affects multiple systems:

Possible fatal effects:

Cardiac failure (sudden death):
Sudden spikes in stress hormones can lead to arrhythmias or even heart failure, especially in older or already weakened individuals. Known in birds and mammals as "capture myopathy" or stress-induced cardiomyopathy.

Exhaustion / metabolic collapse:
During escape, the bird may burn energy reserves extremely quickly. If it was already fatigued (e.g., during migration), this can be fatal.

Internal injury or delayed trauma:
The bird might escape the claws but suffer internal damage, like bruising or bleeding, which isn’t visible immediately but can lead to death later.

Shock and immune suppression:
The stress may cause immune system collapse, leaving the bird vulnerable to infection or other complications in the following hours or days.

(with help the ChatGPT)

Thank you all for following and caring so deeply for these amazing creatures.
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