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Australian waterbirds : time and space travellers in dynamic desert landscapes

journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by R Kingsford, David RoshierDavid Roshier, J Porter
Australia’s waterbirds are mostly nomadic, capitalising on highly variable aquatic resources in the arid interior (70% of the continent) for feeding and breeding. Waterbirds, unlike most aquatic organisms, can move between catchments, exploiting habitat wherever it occurs. In Australia, patterns of resource availability for waterbirds are mostly pulsed with peaks of productivity, coinciding with flooding and differing in time and space, affecting individuals, species and functional groups of waterbirds. Australian waterbirds are no different from waterbirds elsewhere, with their behaviour reflecting broad-scale resource availability. They respond to changing patterns of resource distribution, with rapid movements at spatial and temporal scales commensurate with the dynamics of the resource. The most serious conservation threat to waterbirds is a bottleneck in resource availability, leading to population declines, increasingly forced by anthropogenic impacts. River regulation and other threats (e.g. draining) reduce the availability of wetland habitat and decrease the probability of viable resource patches. It is axiomatic that waterbirds need water and such population bottlenecks may occur when the availability of water across the continent is limited. The rehabilitation of regulated rivers with environmental flows and protection of naturally flowing rivers in the arid region are essential for long-term sustainability of Australia’s waterbird populations.<br>

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Location

Collingwood, Vic.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, CSIRO

Journal

Marine and freshwater research

Volume

61

Pagination

875 - 884

ISSN

1323-1650

eISSN

1448-6059

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