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DOI10.1080/01584197.2023.2240345
Extinct Australian birds: numbers, characteristics, lessons and prospects
Woinarski, John C. Z.; Legge, Sarah M.; Garnett, Stephen T.
发表日期2024
ISSN0158-4197
EISSN1448-5540
起始页码124
结束页码1
卷号124期号:1
英文摘要Since European colonisation of Australia in 1788, nine Australian bird species (1.2% of the Australian total) have become extinct, along with 22 subspecies (of 16 species). Consistent with global patterns, Australia's island endemic birds have been particularly susceptible, comprising eight of the nine species' extinctions (38% of the bird species endemic to islands smaller than Tasmania), and 13 of the 22 subspecies' extinctions. The extinction of only one bird species (Paradise Parrot Psephotellus pulcherrimus) from the Australian mainland contrasts with the far higher rate of extinctions of Australian mammals (27 of 312 species that occurred on the Australian mainland), and is comparable with the rate of extinctions of birds on the mainland of other continents over this period. Extinctions of Australian birds were caused mainly by introduced predators (especially for island taxa), habitat degradation, and hunting (for some island taxa). The timing of some extinctions is uncertain, but the first bird extinction subsequent to European colonisation was the loss of the flightless White Gallinule Porphyrio albus from Lord Howe Island over the period 1788-1790. Extinctions have occurred in most decades since then, with the most recent being for Norfolk Island's White-chested White-eye Zosterops albogularis in the decade 2000-2009. Environmental legislation, an extensive conservation reserve system, and dedicated conservation management efforts have prevented some extinctions. However, local extirpations continue, many threatened species continue to decline and, without an increase in conservation efforts, the rate of extinctions is likely to increase, mainly due to the direct and compounding impacts of climate change. Extinctions of Australian birds have occurred in most decades since European colonisation of Australia.Island bird taxa have proven particularly susceptible, and many of the most imperilled birds are island endemics.Conservation management actions and policies have prevented (and continue to do so) some otherwise probable extinctions.The direct and indirect impacts of climate change will increase the likelihood of extinction for many bird taxa.There is uncertainty about the persistence or extinction of some bird taxa, and these are priorities for surveys and, if found, urgent management interventions.
英文关键词Conservation; extirpation; islands; threatened species
语种英语
WOS研究方向Zoology
WOS类目Ornithology
WOS记录号WOS:001161465900003
来源期刊EMU-AUSTRAL ORNITHOLOGY
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/291168
作者单位Charles Darwin University
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GB/T 7714
Woinarski, John C. Z.,Legge, Sarah M.,Garnett, Stephen T.. Extinct Australian birds: numbers, characteristics, lessons and prospects[J],2024,124(1).
APA Woinarski, John C. Z.,Legge, Sarah M.,&Garnett, Stephen T..(2024).Extinct Australian birds: numbers, characteristics, lessons and prospects.EMU-AUSTRAL ORNITHOLOGY,124(1).
MLA Woinarski, John C. Z.,et al."Extinct Australian birds: numbers, characteristics, lessons and prospects".EMU-AUSTRAL ORNITHOLOGY 124.1(2024).
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