Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vvkck Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T08:45:33.873Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chapter 20 - Australian birds: current status and future prospects

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2014

Stephen T. Garnett
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin University
Judit K. Szabo
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin University
Donald C. Franklin
Affiliation:
Charles Darwin University
Adam Stow
Affiliation:
Macquarie University, Sydney
Norman Maclean
Affiliation:
University of Southampton
Gregory I. Holwell
Affiliation:
University of Auckland
Get access

Summary

Summary

As in much of the world, Australia’s birds have suffered greatly from habitat loss, feral predators and direct exploitation. Less universal have been the declines caused by post-colonial changes in fire regime after 40 000 years of Indigenous fire management. Climate change and a disengagement by Australians from nature loom as threats for the future. However, Australia is a country of climatic extremes and many birds are well-adapted to stressful conditions. Given adequate investment, all the major classes of threat have potential solutions, with particular success in recent decades in the removal of feral predators from islands and in reducing the by-catch from fishing. The biggest threat of all is possibly a failure to invest in conservation as modern lifestyles take people further and further away from the natural environment.

Introduction

Australia’s birds are, like those in so much of the world, travelling poorly. Of the 1239 species and subspecies regularly occurring in Australia, 17% are Threatened or Near Threatened on the basis of the IUCN Red List Criteria (Garnett et al. 2011). This number has been increasing steadily (Szabo et al. 2012a) and, while originally it was taxa of Australia’s oceanic islands that were most likely to be threatened, taxa from the mainland are now starting to slip away (Szabo et al. 2012b). Sadly some of those most threatened are the most distinctive; birds at the end of long slender branches of the evolutionary tree whose closest relatives are long gone. Other species, however, are thriving under the conditions that have arisen over the past few centuries of intense development.

Type
Chapter
Information
Austral Ark
The State of Wildlife in Australia and New Zealand
, pp. 422 - 439
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbott, I., Whitford, K. (2001) Conservation of vertebrate fauna using hollows in forests of south-west Western Australia: strategic risk assessment in relation to ecology, policy, planning, and operations management. Pacific Conservation Biology 7, 240–255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Algar, D., Hilmer, S., Nickels, D., Nickels, A. (2011) Successful domestic cat neutering: first step towards eradicating cats on Christmas Island for wildlife protection. Ecological Management and Restoration 12, 93–101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allan, G. E., Southgate, R. I. (2002) Fire regimes in the spinifex landscapes of Australia. In Flammable Australia. The Fire Regimes and Biodiversity of a Continent (Eds. Bradstock, R. A., Williams, J. E. and Gill, M. A.) pp. 145–176. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.)Google Scholar
Baird, R. F. (1993) Pleistocene avian fossils from Pyramids Cave (M-89), eastern Victoria, Australia. Alcheringa 17, 383–404.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baker-Gabb, D., Hurley, V. G. (2011) Draft National Recovery Plan for the Regent Parrot (eastern subspecies) Polytelis anthopeplus monarchoides. Department of Sustainability and Environment, Melbourne.
Baker, J. R., Whelan, R. J., Evans, L., Moore, S., Norton, M. (2010) Managing the Ground Parrot in its fiery habitat in south-eastern Australia. Emu 110, 279–284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, G., Silcocks, A., Barry, S., Cunningham, R., Poulter, R. (2003) The New Atlas of Australian Birds. (Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union: Hawthorn East.)Google Scholar
Bell, P. J. (1996) Survey of the nasal mite fauna (Rhinonyssidae and Kytoditidae) of the Gouldian finch, Erythrura gouldiae, and some co-occurring birds in the Northern Territory. Wildlife Research 23, 675–685.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blakers, M. S., Davies, J. J. F, Reilly, P. N. (1984) The Atlas of Australian Birds. (Melbourne University Press: Melbourne.)Google Scholar
Bowman, D. J. M. S. (1998) The impact of Aboriginal landscape burning on the Australian biota. New Phytologist 140, 385–410.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradstock, R. A., Gill, A. M., Williams, R. J. (2012) Flammable Australia. Fire Regimes, Biodiversity and Ecosystems in a Changing World. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood.)Google Scholar
Brook, B. W., Sodhi, N. S., Bradshaw, C. J. A (2008) Synergies among extinction drivers under global change. TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution 23, 453–460.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brudvig, L. A., Wagner, S. A., Damschen, E. I. (2012) Corridors promote fire via connectivity and edge effects. Ecological Applications 22, 937–946.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Christidis, L., Norman, J. A. (2010) Evolution of the Australasian songbird fauna. Emu 110, 21–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, G. D., Jackson, S., Williams, R. J. (2012) A revolution in northern Australian fire management: recognition of Indigenous knowledge, practice and management. In Flammable Australia. Fire Regimes, Biodiversity and Ecosystems in a Changing World (Eds. Bradstock, R. A., Gill, A. M. and Williams, R. J.) pp. 293–306. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood)Google Scholar
Cooper, J., Baker, G. B., Double, M. C., et al. (2006) The agreement on the conservation of albatrosses and petrels: rationale, history, progress and the way forward. Marine Ornithology 34, 1–5.Google Scholar
Crosby, A. W. (2004) Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900–1900. (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowley, G. M., Garnett, S. T. (1998) Vegetation change in the grasslands and grassy woodlands of east-central Cape York Peninsula, Australia. Pacific Conservation Biology 4, 132–148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowley, G. M., Garnett, S. T., Shephard, S. (2004) Management Guidelines for Golden-shouldered Parrot Conservation. Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service, Brisbane.Google Scholar
Danks, A. (1997) Conservation of the Noisy Scrub-bird: a review of 35 years of research and management. Pacific Conservation Biology 3, 341–349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Tores, P. J., Marlow, N. (2012) The relative merits of predator-exclusion fencing and repeated fox baiting for protection of native fauna: Five case studies from Western Australia. In Fencing for Conservation: Restriction of Evolutionary Potential or a Riposte to Threatening Processes? (Eds. Somers, M. J. and Hayward, M. W.) pp. 21–42. (Springer: New York.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Department of Environment, Sports and Territories (1996) Australia: State of the Environment. CSIRO, Collingwood.Google Scholar
Doerr, V. A. J., Doerr, E. D., Davies, M. J. (2011) Dispersal behaviour of Brown Treecreepers predicts functional connectivity for several other woodland birds. Emu 111, 71–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Driscoll, D. A., Lindenmayer, D. B. (2010) Assembly rules are rare in SE Australian bird communities, but sometimes apply in fragmented agricultural landscapes. Ecography 33, 854–865.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, S. V., Boles, W. E. (2002) Out of Gondwana: the origin of passerine birds. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 17, 347–349.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ford, H. A. (2011) The causes of decline of birds of eucalypt woodlands: advances in our knowledge over the last 10 years. Emu 111, 1–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ford, H. A., Walters, J. R., Cooper, C. B., Debus, S. J. S., Doerr, V. A. J. (2009) Extinction debt or habitat change? – Ongoing losses of woodland birds in north-eastern New South Wales, Australia. Biological Conservation 142, 3182–3190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franklin, D. C., Reside, A. E., Garnett, S. T. (2014) Conserving Australian bird populations in the face of climate change. In Climate Change Adaptation Plan for Australian Birds (Eds. Garnett, S. T. and Franklin, D. C.) pp. 53–78. (CSIRO: Collingwood.)Google Scholar
Fujioka, T., Chappell, J. (2010) History of Australian aridity: chronology in the evolution of arid landscapes. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 346, 121–139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garnett, S. T., Franklin, D. C. (in press) Climate Change Adaptation Plan for Australian Birds. (CSIRO: Collingwood.)
Garnett, S. T., Pavey, C. R., Ehmke, G., et al. (2014) Adaptation outlines for species that are both highly sensitive and highly exposed. In Climate Change Adaptation Plan for Australian Birds. (Eds. Garnett, S. T. and Franklin, D. C.) pp. 79–241. (CSIRO: Collingwood.)Google Scholar
Garnett, S. T., Pedler, L. P., Crowley, G. M. (1999) The breeding biology of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus lathami on Kangaroo Island, South Australia. Emu 99, 262–279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garnett, S. T., Szabo, J. K., Dutson, G. (2011) The Action Plan for Australian Birds 2010. (CSIRO Publishing: Collingwood.)Google Scholar
Gilbert-Norton, L., Wilson, R., Stevens, J. R., Beard, K. H. (2010) A meta-analytic review of corridor effectiveness. Conservation Biology 24, 660–668.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, J. B. C., Damien, A., Fordham, D. A., et al. (2009) Spatially Explicit Population Viability Analysis of the South Australian Subspecies of the Glossy Black-Cockatoo (Calyptorhynchus lathami halmaturinus) Under Climate Change. Report to the Glossy Black-Cockatoo Recovery Program, Kingscote.
Hilbert, D. W., Graham, A., Hopkins, M. S. (2007) Glacial and interglacial refugia within a long-term rainforest refugium: the Wet Tropics Bioregion of NE Queensland, Australia. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 251, 104–118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, I., Parkes, J. P., Sinclair, A. R. E. (2007) Reassembling island ecosystems: the case of Lord Howe Island. Animal Conservation 22, 22–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judd, S., Watson, E. M., Watson, A. W. T. (2008) Diversity of a semi-arid, intact Mediterranean ecosystem in southwest Australia. Web Ecology 8, 84–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koch, P. (2005) Factors influencing food availability for the endangered south-eastern Red-tailed Black Cockatoo Calyptorhynchus banksii graptogyne in remnant stringybark woodland, and implications for management. PhD thesis, University of Adelaide, Adelaide.
Lebreton, J.-D., Veran, S. (2013) Direct evidence of the impact of longline fishery on mortality in the Black-footed Albatross Phoebastria nigripes. Bird Conservation International 23, 25–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lindenmayer, D. B., Gibbons, P., Bourke, M., et al. (2012) Improving biodiversity monitoring. Austral Ecology 37, 285–294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lokkeborg, S. (2011) Best practices to mitigate seabird bycatch in longline, trawl and gillnet fisheries-efficiency and practical applicability. Marine Ecology Progress Series 435, 285–303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowe, K. A., Taylor, C. E., Major, R. E. (2011) Do Common Mynas significantly compete with native birds in urban environments?Journal of Ornithology 152, 909–921.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luckert, M. K., Campbell, B. M., Gorman, J. T., Garnett, S. T. (2007) Investing in Indigenous Natural Resource Management. (Charles Darwin University Press: Darwin)Google Scholar
MacKinnon, J., Verkuil, Y. I., Murray, N. (2012) IUCN Situation Analysis on East and Southeast Asian Intertidal Habitats, with Particular Reference to the Yellow Sea (Including the Bohai Sea). IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK.Google Scholar
Macknight, C. C. (1976) The Voyage to Marege. Macassan Trepangers in northern Northern Australia. (Melbourne University Press: Melbourne.)Google Scholar
MacNally, R., Bowen, M. E., Howes, A., McAlpine, C., Maron, M. (2012) Despotic, high-impact species and the subcontinental scale control of avian assemblage structure. Ecology 93, 668–678.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Manning, A. D., Lindenmayer, D. B., Barry, S. C. (2004) The conservation implications of bird reproduction in the agricultural “matrix”: a case study of the vulnerable superb parrot of south-eastern Australia. Biological Conservation 120, 363–374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marsden-Smedley, J. B., Kirkpatrick, J. B. (2000) Fire management in Tasmania’s Wilderness World Heritage Area: ecosystem restoration using Indigenous-style fire regimes?Ecological Management and Restoration 1, 195–203.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, T. G., Catterall, C. P., Manning, A. D., Szabo, J. K. (2012a) Australian birds in a changing landscape: 220 years of European colonization. In Birds and Habitat: Relationships in Changing Landscapes (Ed. Fuller, R. J.) pp. 453–480. (Cambridge University Press.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, T. G., Nally, S., Burbidge, A. A., et al. (2012b) Acting fast helps avoid extinction. Conservation Letters 5, 274–280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McAllan, I. A. W., Curtis, B. R., Hutton, I., Cooper, R. M. (2004) The birds of the Lord Howe Island Group: a review of records. Australian Field Ornithology 21, 1–82.Google Scholar
Mccallum, M. L., Bury, G. W. (2013) Google search patterns suggest declining interest in the environment. Biodiversity and Conservation 22, 1355–1367.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, G. H., Magee, J. W., Johnson, B. J., et al. (1999) Pleistocene extinction of Genyornis newtoni: human impact on Australian megafauna. Science 283, 205–208.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O’Connell, J. F., Allen, J. (2004) Dating the colonization of Sahul (Pleistocene Australia–New Guinea): a review of recent research. Journal of Archaeological Science 31, 835–853.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parmesan, C., Yohe, G. (2003) A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems. Nature 421, 37–41.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Price, O. F., Russell-Smith, J., Watt, F. (2012) The influence of prescribed fire on the extent of wildfire in savanna landscapes of western Arnhem Land, Australia. International Journal of Wildland Fire 21, 297–305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raymond, B., McInnes, J., Dambacher, J. M., Way, S., Bergstrom, D. M. (2011) Qualitative modelling of invasive species eradication on subantarctic Macquarie Island. Journal of Applied Ecology 48, 181–191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Recher, H. F., Lim, L. (1990) A review of current ideas of the extinction, conservation and management of Australia’s terrestrial vertebrate fauna. Proceedings of the Ecological Society of Australia 16, 287–301.Google Scholar
Robinson, D. (2006) Is revegetation in the Sheep Pen Creek area, Victoria, improving Grey-crowned Babbler habitat?Ecological Management and Restoration 7, 93–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rolls, E. C. (1969) They All Ran Wild: The Story of Pests on the Land in Australia. (Angus and Robertson: Sydney.)Google Scholar
Savolainen, P., Leitner, T., Wilton, A. N., Matisoo-Smith, E., Lundeberg, J. (2004) A detailed picture of the origin of the Australian dingo, obtained from the study of mitochondrial DNA. PNAS 101, 12387–12390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schodde, R., Fullagar, P., Hermes, N. (1983) A Review of the Status of Norfolk Island Birds: Past and Present. Australian National Parks and Wildlife Service, Canberra.Google Scholar
Shearer, B. L., Crane, C. E., Barrett, S., Cochrane, A. (2007) Phytophthora cinnamomi invasion, a major threatening process to conservation of flora diversity in the South-west Botanical Province of Western Australia. Australian Journal of Botany 55, 225–238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szabo, J. K., Baxter, P. W. J., Vesk, P. A., Possingham, H. P. (2011) Paying the extinction debt: woodland birds in the Mount Lofty Ranges, South Australia. Emu 111, 59–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szabo, J. K., Butchart, S. H. M., Possingham, H. P., Garnett, S. T. (2012a) Adapting global biodiversity indicators to the national scale: a Red List Index for Australian birds. Biological Conservation 148, 61–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szabo, J. K., Khwaja, N., Garnett, S. T., Butchart, S. H. M. (2012b) Global patterns and drivers of avian extinctions at the species and subspecies level. PLoS ONE 7, e47080.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service (2014) Macquarie Island Pest Eradication. . Accessed 20 July 2014.
Tidemann, S. C., McOrist, S., Woinarski, J. C. Z., Freeland, W. J. (1992) Parasitism of wild Gouldian finches (Erythrura gouldiae) by the air-sac mite Sternosoma tracheacolum. Journal of Wildlife Diseases 28, 80–84.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tucker, N. I. J. (2000) Linkage restoration: Interpreting fragmentation theory for the design of a rainforest linkage in the humid Wet Tropics of north-eastern Queensland. Ecological Management and Restoration 1, 35–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Veevers, J., Powell, C., Roots, S. (1991) Review of seafloor spreading around Australia. I. Synthesis of the patterns of spreading. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences 38, 373–389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D. M. (2011) A productivity-based explanation for woodland bird declines: poorer soils yield less food. Emu 111, 10–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wheelwright, H. W. (1868) Bush Wanderings of a Naturalist: or, Notes on the Field Sports and Fauna of Australia Felix. (Routledge, Warne, & Routledge: London)Google Scholar
Whitten, S. M., Freudenberger, D., Wyborn, C., Doerr, V. A. J., Doerr, E. D. (2011) A Compendium of Existing and Planned Australian Wildlife Corridor Projects and Initiatives, and Case Study Analysis of Operational Experience. A report for the Australian Government Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities. CSIRO Ecosystem Sciences.Google Scholar
Widlansky, M. J., Timmermann, A., Stein, K., et al. (2013) Changes in South Pacific rainfall bands in a warming climate. Nature Climate Change 3, 417–423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woinarski, J. C. Z., Whitehead, P. J., Bowman, D. M. J., Russell-Smith, J. (1992) Conservation of mobile species in a variable environment: the problem of reserve design in the Northern Territory, Australia. Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters 2, 1–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zander, K. K., Ainsworth, G., Meyerhoff, J., Garnett, S. T. (2014) Threatened bird valuation in Australia. PLoS ONE 9, e100411.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×