Status des Luchses in Deutschland

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Sybille Wölfl - , Luchs Bayern e. V. (Author)
  • Ole Anders - , Nationalparkverwaltung Harz (Author)
  • Tomma Lilli Middelhoff - , Nationalparkverwaltung Harz (Author)
  • Ulf Hohmann - , Forschungsanstalt für Waldökologie und Forstwirtschaft (Author)
  • Michael Back - , Forschungsanstalt für Waldökologie und Forstwirtschaft (Author)
  • Sylvia Idelberger - , Nature and Environment Foundation Rhineland-Palatinate (Author)
  • Jochen Krebühl - , Nature and Environment Foundation Rhineland-Palatinate (Author)
  • Judith Ohm - , Nature and Environment Foundation Rhineland-Palatinate (Author)
  • Annina Prüssing - , Nature and Environment Foundation Rhineland-Palatinate (Author)
  • Micha Herdtfelder - , Forest Research Institute Baden-Württemberg (Author)
  • Felix Böcker - , Forest Research Institute Baden-Württemberg (Author)
  • Johannes Erretkamps - , Forest Research Institute Baden-Württemberg (Author)
  • Linda Kopaniak - , Forest Research Institute Baden-Württemberg (Author)
  • Manfred Wölfl - , Bavarian State Office for the Environment (Author)
  • Susanne Jokisch - , Hessian State Agency for Nature Conservation, Environment, and Geology (Author)
  • Ingrid Hucht-Ciorga - , Landesamt für Natur (Author)
  • Jens Teubner - , Brandenburg State Office for the Environment (Author)
  • Martin Trost - , State Office for Environmental Protection Saxony-Anhalt (LAU) (Author)
  • Jana Zschille - , Chair of Forest Zoology (Author)
  • Elena Jeß - , Bergbau und Naturschutz (Author)
  • Charlotte Steinberg - , Energie und Naturschutz (Author)

Abstract

The lynx currently occurs in three reintroduced populations in Germany: in eastern Bavaria, in the Harz Mountains and in the Palatinate Forest. Status assessment is performed according to monitoring standards which were agreed upon nationwide, and the status found is summarised in yearly distribution maps based on a 10 km × 10 km EEA reference grid. The lynx population in Bavaria exists since the 1990s, but exhibits only very slow expansion, mainly due to a high level of illegal killing. The population in the Harz Mountains is spreading and individual males have migrated to Brandenburg and Bavaria. In the Palatinate Forest a reintroduction programme started in 2015; in the meantime, wild-born lynx kittens are documented regularly. In Baden-Wuerttemberg there has been consistent evidence of individual male lynx which immigrated mainly from Switzerland. Immigration by females is not very likely in view of habitat fragmentation. To secure the long-term viability of the lynx in Germany the existing lynx populations need to be connected on a Central European scale. For this purpose, the German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (BfN) commissioned a conceptual framework coordinated nationwide, which will outline suitable measures to reach favourable conservation status.

Translated title of the contribution
Status of the lynx in Germany

Details

Original languageGerman
Pages (from-to)2-10
Number of pages9
JournalNatur und Landschaft
Volume96
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Keywords

  • Distribution, Lynx, Lynx lynx, Monitoring, Monitoring standards, Status, Threats