The Directory of Australian Birds: Passerines

The Directory of Australian Birds: Passerines
Author: Richard Schodde
Publisher:
Total Pages: 872
Release: 1999
Genre: Birds
ISBN:

Fills a huge gap in ornithological knowledge by separating out and listing not only 340 species of song-birds but also the 720 distinct regional forms.

Directory of Australian Birds: Passerines

Directory of Australian Birds: Passerines
Author: R Schodde
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 887
Release: 1999-10-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0643102930

Recent classifications of Australian birds have been limited to lists of "species" which are inadequate as biodiversity indicators. The Directory of Australian Birds: Passerines fills a huge gap in ornithological knowledge by separating out and listing not only 340 species of song-birds but also the 720 distinct regional forms. Covering about half the national bird fauna, the Directory provides science and the community with baseline information about what bird it is and where it lives in an Australia-wide context. Identity is taken down to the level of distinct regional population. No other compendium on Australian birds does this.

The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2020

The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2020
Author: Stephen T. Garnett
Publisher: CSIRO PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 817
Release: 2021-12
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1486311911

The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2020 is the most comprehensive review of the status of Australia's avifauna ever attempted. The latest in a series of action plans for Australian birds that have been produced every decade since 1992, it is also the largest. The accounts in this plan have been authored by more than 300 of the most knowledgeable bird experts in the country, and feature far more detail than any of the earlier plans. This volume also includes accounts of over 60 taxa that are no longer considered threatened, mainly thanks to sustained conservation action over many decades. This extensive book covers key themes that have emerged in the last decade, including the increasing impact of climate change as a threatening process, most obviously in Queensland's tropical rainforests where many birds are being pushed up the mountains. However, the effects are also indirect, as happened in the catastrophic fires of 2019/20. Many of the newly listed birds are subspecies confined to Kangaroo Island, where fire destroyed over half the population. But there are good news stories too, especially on islands where there have been spectacular successes with predator control. Such uplifting results demonstrate that when action plans are followed by action on the ground, threatened species can indeed be recovered and threats alleviated.