Continuing recovery of wolves in Europe
Data files
Jan 29, 2025 version files 6.07 KB
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depredation_and_compensation.csv
2.73 KB
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populations.csv
518 B
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README.md
2.82 KB
Abstract
The recovery of wolves (Canis lupus) across Europe is a notable conservation success in a region with extensive human alteration of landscapes and high human population densities. We provide a comprehensive update on wolf populations in Europe, estimated at over 21,500 individuals by 2022, representing a 58% increase over the past decade. Despite the challenges of high human densities and significant land use for agriculture, industry, and urbanization, wolves have demonstrated remarkable adaptability and increasing population trends in most European countries. Improved monitoring techniques, although varying in quality and scope, have played a crucial role in tracking this recovery. Annually, wolves kill approximately 56,000 domestic animals in the EU, a risk unevenly distributed and differently handled across regions. Damage compensation costs 17 million EUR every year to European countries. Positive economic impacts from wolf presence, such as those related to reducing traffic accidents with wild ungulates or supporting wildlife tourism, remain under studied. Wolf recovery in Europe is supported by diverse policy and legal instruments such as LIFE programs, stakeholder platforms, as well as the EU Habitats Directive and the Bern Convention. Coexisting with newly established wolf populations in Europe entails managing impacts on human activities, including livestock depredation, competition for game, and fear of attacks on humans, amidst varying social and political views on wolf recovery. Sustainable coexistence continues to operate in evolving and complex social, economic, and political landscapes, often characterized by intense debates regarding wolf policies.
README
Manuscript: Continuing recovery of wolves in Europe
The two data files are:
- Depredations and compensation costs for each of the 34 countries. The following fields document depredations: depredation unit (i.e. n animals killed for all countries, except for Poland), domestic animal (sheep and goat, cattle, horse and donkey, semi-domestic reindeer, dog) killed, total depredations, year of depredation data, amount of compensation for wolf damages (EUR), and year of compensation data. These figures are taken from Table 3 of the LCIE report by Boitani et al. (2022), except for few cases where the number was updated by the country-responsible author. The dataset also reports the wolf abundance (in number of individuals) and the year of wolf abundance data, as well as the calculated depredations per wolf (total depredations/wolf abundance) and the calculated compensation per wolf (compensation/wolf abundance). The wolf abundance figures are taken from Table 1 of the LCIE report by Boitani et al. (2022), with an average value given when only a range was provided.
- Population size estimates for the nine European wolf populations defined by the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe (LCIE), respectively for A) 2012-2016 from the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe LCIE (Linnell & Cretois 2018), B) 2013-2018 from country reports in 2018 under Article 17 and Resolution No.8 (Eionet 2024), and C) 2020-2022 from the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe LCIE (Boitani et al. 2022). These figures are taken from Table 4 of the LCIE report Boitani et al. (2022), with an average value given when only a range was provided.
References
Boitani L., Kaczensky, P. Alvares, F. Andrén, H., Balys, V., Blanco, J.C., Chapron, G., Chiriac, S., Cirovic, D., Drouet-Houguet, N., Groff, C., D. Huber, D., Iliopoulos, Y., Ionescu, O., Kojola, I., Krofel, M., Kutal, M., Linnell, J.D.C., Majic, A., Mannil, P., Marucco, F., Melovski, D., Mengüllüoğlu, D., Mergeay, J., Nowak, S., Ozolins, J., Perovic, A., Rauer, G., Reinhardt, I., Rigg, R., Salvatori, V., Sanaja, B., Schley, L., Shkvyria, M., Sunde, P., Tirronen, K., Trajce, A., Trbojevic, I., Trouwborst, A., von Arx, M., Wolfl, M., Zlatanova, D. & Patkó, L. (2022). Assessment of the conservation status of the Wolf (Canis lupus) in Europe. Council of Europe Publishing: Strasbourg, France.
Eionet. Article 17 - Species assessments at Member State level (Mammals). 2024 [cited 20 Sep 2024]. Available: https://nature-art17.eionet.europa.eu/article17/species/report/?period=5&group=Mammals
Linnell J.D.C. & Cretois B. The revival of wolves and other large predators and its impact on farmers and their livelihood in rural regions of Europe. European Parliament; (2018).
Methods
In fall 2022, the authors of this paper compiled estimates of wolf population size, trends and damages within their country, as well as details of the monitoring methodology used, the quality of the data, and other information on the legal status and main conservation measures, following a similar method as Chapron et al. (2014), restricting the compilation to existing information and without new analyses of raw monitoring data. Information was obtained from the most reliable sources available at the national level. This joint compilation effort was facilitated by the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe, a Specialist Group of the IUCN’s Species Survival Commission. Collectively we covered all the European continent, except for the Russian Federation, Belarus and the Republic of Moldova, representing 34 countries (Albania, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Türkiye (European part), and Ukraine (only the Carpathians)).