Australian threatened birds for which the risk of extinction declined between 1990 and 2020 ...

Reducing extinction risk is a common aim of threatened species management. However, over the period 1990 to 2020, extinction risk was recently assessed as having declined in only 25 out of the 199 Australian bird taxa eligible for assessment. Here we analyse patterns that emerge from these taxa. Som...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Garnett, Stephen T., Baker, G. Barry, Berryman, Alex J., Carlile, Nicholas, Ely, Isabel, Geyle, Hayley M., Legge, Sarah M., Rumpff, Libby, Zander, Kerstin K., Woinarski, John C.Z.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Taylor & Francis 2024
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.25203391.v1
https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Australian_threatened_birds_for_which_the_risk_of_extinction_declined_between_1990_and_2020/25203391/1
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Summary:Reducing extinction risk is a common aim of threatened species management. However, over the period 1990 to 2020, extinction risk was recently assessed as having declined in only 25 out of the 199 Australian bird taxa eligible for assessment. Here we analyse patterns that emerge from these taxa. Some of these improvements may be only temporary; the extinction risk of three taxa increased after it had initially declined. Invasive predator control on islands was the conservation intervention with greatest impact, benefitting 13 taxa (with nine of these from Macquarie Island). For four taxa, intensive management was the primary driver of reduced risk. Another four benefited from habitat protection and one from law enforcement. For seven taxa, conservation actions had no discernible effect; for two albatrosses a shift in fishing patterns may have reduced bycatch, for one, losses on the mainland meant that most birds now persist only in a stable island population and, for four taxa, reasons for changes in ...