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Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)

BACKGROUND: There are few studies of careful examination of wildlife casualties in Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers. These studies are essential for detecting menaces to wild species and providing objective criteria about cost-benefit of treatments in those centers. The release rate is considered the...

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Autores principales: Molina-López, Rafael Angel, Mañosa, Santi, Torres-Riera, Alex, Pomarol, Manel, Darwich, Laila
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5515437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28719647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181331
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author Molina-López, Rafael Angel
Mañosa, Santi
Torres-Riera, Alex
Pomarol, Manel
Darwich, Laila
author_facet Molina-López, Rafael Angel
Mañosa, Santi
Torres-Riera, Alex
Pomarol, Manel
Darwich, Laila
author_sort Molina-López, Rafael Angel
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There are few studies of careful examination of wildlife casualties in Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers. These studies are essential for detecting menaces to wild species and providing objective criteria about cost-benefit of treatments in those centers. The release rate is considered the main outcome indicator, but other parameters such as length of stay at the center and a cost-benefit index expressed as number of released animals per euro and day, could be used as reliable estimators of the rehabilitation costs. METHODOLOGY: A retrospective study based on 54772 admissions recorded from 1995–2013 in the database of the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Torreferrussa (Catalonia, NW Spain) assessed the morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefits of the rehabilitation practices. RESULTS: Three hundred and two species were included: 232 birds (n = 48633), 37 mammals (n = 3293), 20 reptiles (n = 2705) and 13 amphibians (n = 141). The most frequent causes of admission were: 39.8% confiscation of protected species (89.4% passerines), 31.8% orphaned young animals (35.3% swifts, 21.7% diurnal raptors and owls) and 17.4% trauma casualties (46.7% raptors and owls). The highest proportion of releases was found in the captivity confiscation category [87.4% passerines (median time of stay: 12 days)], followed by the orphaned category [78% owls (66 days), 76.5% diurnal birds of prey (43 days), 75.6% hedgehogs (49 days), 52.7% swifts (19 days) and 52% bats (55 days)]. For the trauma group, 46.8% of releases were hedgehogs (44 days) and 25.6% owls (103 days). As regards the cost-benefit index, the trauma casualties and infectious diseases had the worse values with 1.3 and 1.4 released animals/euro/day respectively, and were particularly low in raptors, waders, marine birds and chiroptera. On the contrary, captivity (4.6) and misplacement (4.1) had the best index, particulary in amphibian, reptiles and passerines. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Cost-benefit studies including the release rate, the time of stay at the center and the cost-benefit index should be implemented for improving management efficiency of the Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers.
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spelling pubmed-55154372017-08-07 Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain) Molina-López, Rafael Angel Mañosa, Santi Torres-Riera, Alex Pomarol, Manel Darwich, Laila PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: There are few studies of careful examination of wildlife casualties in Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers. These studies are essential for detecting menaces to wild species and providing objective criteria about cost-benefit of treatments in those centers. The release rate is considered the main outcome indicator, but other parameters such as length of stay at the center and a cost-benefit index expressed as number of released animals per euro and day, could be used as reliable estimators of the rehabilitation costs. METHODOLOGY: A retrospective study based on 54772 admissions recorded from 1995–2013 in the database of the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center of Torreferrussa (Catalonia, NW Spain) assessed the morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefits of the rehabilitation practices. RESULTS: Three hundred and two species were included: 232 birds (n = 48633), 37 mammals (n = 3293), 20 reptiles (n = 2705) and 13 amphibians (n = 141). The most frequent causes of admission were: 39.8% confiscation of protected species (89.4% passerines), 31.8% orphaned young animals (35.3% swifts, 21.7% diurnal raptors and owls) and 17.4% trauma casualties (46.7% raptors and owls). The highest proportion of releases was found in the captivity confiscation category [87.4% passerines (median time of stay: 12 days)], followed by the orphaned category [78% owls (66 days), 76.5% diurnal birds of prey (43 days), 75.6% hedgehogs (49 days), 52.7% swifts (19 days) and 52% bats (55 days)]. For the trauma group, 46.8% of releases were hedgehogs (44 days) and 25.6% owls (103 days). As regards the cost-benefit index, the trauma casualties and infectious diseases had the worse values with 1.3 and 1.4 released animals/euro/day respectively, and were particularly low in raptors, waders, marine birds and chiroptera. On the contrary, captivity (4.6) and misplacement (4.1) had the best index, particulary in amphibian, reptiles and passerines. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Cost-benefit studies including the release rate, the time of stay at the center and the cost-benefit index should be implemented for improving management efficiency of the Wildlife Rehabilitation Centers. Public Library of Science 2017-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC5515437/ /pubmed/28719647 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181331 Text en © 2017 Molina-López et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Molina-López, Rafael Angel
Mañosa, Santi
Torres-Riera, Alex
Pomarol, Manel
Darwich, Laila
Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title_full Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title_fullStr Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title_full_unstemmed Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title_short Morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in Catalonia (Spain)
title_sort morbidity, outcomes and cost-benefit analysis of wildlife rehabilitation in catalonia (spain)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5515437/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28719647
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0181331
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