Australian waterbirds — products of the continent's ecology
R. T. Kingsford and F. I. Norman
Emu 102(1) 47 - 69
Abstract
Some aspects of the ecology of 93 waterbird species, found predominantly on
freshwater ecosystems, are reviewed. These species, belonging to six major
orders — Anseriformes (ducks, geese and Black Swan), Podicipediformes
(grebes), Pelecaniformes (Australian Pelican and cormorants), Ciconiiformes
(herons, ibis, spoonbills and bitterns), Gruiformes (cranes, rails, crakes and
gallinules), and Charadriiformes (waders and terns) — use a wide range
of habitats and about half occur throughout the continent. Knowledge of their
ecology remains poor for many waterbirds, particularly cryptic and rare
species, and is moderate to good for hunted species. Life histories of
Australian waterbirds differ from their counterparts elsewhere.
Australia’s highly variable climate and river-flooding patterns create
wetland habitats, the spatial and temporal variability of which strongly
influence the ecology of local waterbirds. Many waterbirds respond to newly
generated habitats to feed and/or breed and then disperse or die as wetlands
dry. Regular movements are not common in most Australian species although
some, particularly waders, migrate between Northern Hemisphere breeding
grounds and non-breeding habitat in Australia. Breeding of Australian
waterbirds coincides with food abundance in the southern spring, the wet
season in the tropics and following floods inland. Habitat loss through
draining of wetlands, regulation of rivers, diversion of water for irrigation
and floodplain development are currently the major threats to waterbirds.
Other potentially threatening processes include exotic plants and animals,
pollution, climate change and over-harvesting but evidence for the impact of
these factors remains poor. Understanding of waterbird, particularly
waterfowl, ecology has contributed significantly to the conservation
management of wetlands in Australia. Research on single species, studies of
movements using satellite technology, further investigation of the effects of
hunting, long-term monitoring and large-scale analyses of the availability of
wetland habitat should be future research priorities.
Full text doi:10.1071/MU01030
© CSIRO 2002





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