Threatened migratory bird species
Nature
The danger of extermination threatens certain species of birds, particularly migratory birds, due to: the killing of birds during their breeding seasons and (for migratory birds) during their return flight to their nesting ground; the capture or killing of birds or the collecting of their eggs for commercial exploitation; the use of methods of mass killing or capture of birds (which also often causes them unnecessary suffering); the rapid disappearance of suitable breeding grounds for birds as a result of human intervention; and the increasing destruction of birds by hydrocarbons, water pollution, insecticides and other poisons.
Incidence
Every year hundreds of thousands of migratory birds are slaughtered by Maltese hunters. Laws protecting these birds are rarely enforced. Severe drought in the Sahel zone of western Africa in the 1970s and early 1980s has devastated British populations of the migratory whitethroat, sedge warbler and sand martin.
Tall buildings in Toronto are responsible for collision deaths of an estimated one million migrating birds each year.
Claim
It is in the interests of science, the protection of nature, and the economy of each nation to protect these species of birds.