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NESP MaC Project 1.21 - Australia’s Coastal Shorebirds: Trends and Prospects

This record provides an overview of the NESP Marine and Coastal Hub small-scale study - "Australia’s Coastal Shorebirds: Trends and Prospects". No data outputs were generated by this project.

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Coastal Australia is home to 37 regularly occurring migratory shorebird species, with many protected areas including Ramsar sites designated on the basis of shorebird populations. Many migratory shorebirds are declining rapidly, and hence the focus of conservation efforts at multiple levels of government in Australia and overseas. However, trend data are now nearly 10 years old, meaning the information available to assess where conservation actions are needed most urgently and whether conservation efforts are helping species recover are outdated.


To ensure populations have the best chance at recovery and that resources are allocated where they are most likely to have the greatest positive impacts, it is critical to maintain up-to-date information on species trends. This project analysed 30 years of shorebird monitoring data collected by citizen science groups across Australia and curated by BirdLife Australia’s National Shorebird Monitoring Program to update national trend estimates, while also assessing the relative effects of human pressure and conservation efforts on population trends. In particular, it focused on 15 migratory shorebird species whose conservation status was being reassessed by the Australian Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water. This project sets the stage for building the next decade of coastal shorebird conservation activity in Australia, coordinated through the national mechanism of the End User: National Migratory Shorebird Conservation Action Plan Steering Committee, with representatives from national and state governments as well as leading shorebird experts.


Outputs

• Fact Sheet on Australia's coastal shorebird trends and prospects [written]

• Final Project Report, including a short summary of recommendations for policy makers of key findings [written]

Simple

Identification info

Date (Creation)
2021-03-01

Resource provider

Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment (DAWE), Australian Government
Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment (DAWE)
GPO Box 858
Canberra
Australian Capital Territory
2601
Australia

Principal investigator

The University of Queensland - Fuller, Richard
Queensland
Australia
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Collaborator

The University of Queensland - Rogers, Andrew
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Collaborator

The University of Queensland - Amano, Tatsuya
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Purpose
To (1) update shorebird population national trends estimates, (ii) determine whether declines have decelerated through conservation efforts, and (iii) identify regional hotspots of Australian impacts on shorebird populations.
Credit
National Environmental Science Program (NESP) Marine and Coastal Hub
Credit
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW), Australian Government
Credit
In addition to NESP (DCCEEW) funding, this project is matched by an equivalent amount of in-kind support and co-investment from project partners and collaborators.
Status
Completed

Point of contact

The University of Queensland - Fuller, Richard
Queensland
Australia
ROR ID >

ORCID >

Topic category
  • Biota

Extent



Temporal extent

Time period
2021-09-01 2022-08-31
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Keywords (dataSource)
  • National Environmental Science Program (NESP) Marine and Coastal Hub
Keywords (Theme)
  • migratory species
  • threatened species
  • population trends
  • coastal wetlands
  • Wildlife Conservation Plan
GCMD Earth Science keywords
  • POPULATION ESTIMATES
  • ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
  • BIRDS

Resource constraints

Classification
Unclassified

Resource constraints

Use limitation
This project was funded by the Australian Government Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water (DCCEEW) through the NESP Marine and Coastal Hub.

Resource constraints

Linkage
http://i.creativecommons.org/l/by/4.0/88x31.png

License Graphic

Title
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License


>

Website
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

License Text

Character encoding
UTF8

Distribution Information

OnLine resource
Fact Sheet

Fuller RA (2023) Fact sheet – Australia’s coastal shorebirds: trends and prospects. National Environment Science Program Marine Biodiversity Hub.

OnLine resource
Final Project Report

Rogers A, Fuller RA and Amano T (2023) Australia’s migratory shorebirds: trends and prospects. Report to the National Environmental Science Program. The University of Queensland, Brisbane.

OnLine resource
Project page on NESP Marine and Coastal Hub website

OnLine resource
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water: NESP MaC Hub website

Metadata

Metadata identifier
urn:uuid/7857ff01-9f4e-4fc6-9ce1-db8824fb0292

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Point of contact

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies - Emma Flukes (NESP Marine and Coastal Hub Data Manager (Southern node))
Parent metadata
  • National Environmental Science Program (NESP) Marine and Coastal (MaC) Hub - Funding Program 2021-2027

Type of resource

Resource scope
Field session
Name
MaC Hub Project 1.21
Metadata linkage
https://metadata.imas.utas.edu.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/catalog.search#/metadata/7857ff01-9f4e-4fc6-9ce1-db8824fb0292

Point of truth URL of this metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2022-03-01T12:00:00
Date info (Revision)
2025-03-03T09:04:52

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-3:2018
 
 

Overviews

thumbnail

Spatial extent

Keywords

Wildlife Conservation Plan coastal wetlands migratory species population trends threatened species
GCMD Earth Science keywords
BIRDS ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS POPULATION ESTIMATES

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Access to the record in catalogue
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Associated resources

Not available


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