Zones importantes pour la conservation des oiseaux dans le monde Important Bird Areas of the World
Areas Importantes para la Conservación de las Aves en el mundo Ключевые орнитологические территории мира
世界上的重點鳥區
المناطق المهمة للطيور في العالم
Unprotected IBA or protection status unknown Wholly or partially protected IBA The process of IBA identification is still underway in some areas, including Antarctica, Chile, New Guinea, New Zealand, the USA and in the marine environment. Preliminary or partial information is shown for these areas, where available. While all IBAs are internationally significant, only those meeting global criteria are shown. The presentation of information on this map and the geographical designations employed do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of BirdLife International concerning the legal status of any country, territory or area, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
More information on BirdLife International’s Important Bird Areas programme is given on the reverse of this poster.
10,000 sites to save Andorra
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
10,000 個需要拯救的地方
10.000 sites à sauver
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Bolivia
Botswana
Brazil
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cameroon
Canada
Chile
Cook Islands
Cote d’Ivoire
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Djibouti
Denmark
Dominican
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia
Ethiopia
Falkland Islands
Faroe Islands
Finland
Republic
(Malvinas)
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Gibratar
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Jordan
Kenya
French Polynesia
10.000 sitios para salvar
Canada
France
Kuwait
www.birdlife.org
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10,000 территорий подлежат охране
Latvia
Palau
Spain
Lebanon
Liberia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
FYR Macedonia
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Malta
Mexico
Myanmar
Nepal
Netherlands
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Palestine
Panama
Paraguay
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Romania
Rwanda
Samoa
Saudi Arabia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
South Africa
Sri Lanka
Suriname
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tanzania
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Uganda
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Uruguay
USA
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Oceania Middle East and Central Asia
1
South America Asia Africa Australasia North America Central America and the Caribbean Europe 0% 50% 100% Percentage of wholly or partially protected IBAs Source: Analysis of data held in BirdLife’s World Bird Database
... are the most significant places for conserving birds
... are identified using standardised science-based criteria
3
Image: Bicoloured Antvireo (Guy Tudor) Coppery-chested Jacamar (Clive Byers) White-necked Parakeet (Etel Vilaró) colombia
Ecuador–Peru East Andes EBA Number of restricted-range species 11–14
•
• 6–10 • 3–5 •
1–2 ecuador
Coppery-chested Jacamar
1 Globally threatened species
Four categories of criteria are used to identify IBAs consistently worldwide. These are based on the two main considerations used 2 in planning site networks for biodiversity conservation: threat Restricted(category 1) and irreplaceability (categories 2, 3 & 4).
150
National IBA publications 1987–2010 White-necked Parakeet
range species Peru those with breeding ranges smaller than 50,000 km2
Criteria for identifying IBAs
3 Biomerestricted assemblages
Source: www.birdlife.org/sowb
4 Congregations large aggregations of one or more species
communities of birds characteristic of a distinct biome
Some places are much more important for birds (and other biodiversity) than others. It is effective to focus conservation effort on these places. For IBAs, the distribution of key bird species defines the key sites—discrete areas of habitat that can be delineated and, at least potentially, managed for conservation. Currently, some 10,000 IBAs have been identified worldwide, with global coverage of terrestrial and freshwater environments nearly complete.
120
90
60
30
0 1987 1988 1989 1991 1992 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Year of publication
4
Image: Blue-bellied Roller (NCF)
... highlight gaps in protected area networks The Programme of Work on Protected Areas of the Convention on Biological Diversity encourages countries to establish and maintain comprehensive and ecologically representative protected area networks. Combining data on IBAs and existing protected areas highlights some of the most important gaps. Despite recent increases, only some 25% of IBAs are fully legally protected.
Evidence shows that IBA networks are disproportionately important for other animals and plants. They are an effective ‘first cut’ of the overall network of Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs), the most significant sites for biodiversity conservation worldwide. The highest conservation priorities of all KBAs are the Alliance for Zero Extinction sites (AZEs), those holding the last remaining populations of Critically Endangered or Endangered species. Some 600 AZEs have been identified worldwide, of which more than half are also IBAs.
Relationship between current protected area network and IBAs in Bolivia Coverage of Important Bird Areas by protected areas 50
% protected
40
Mean % area protected % sites completely protected
30 20 10 0 1950
1960
1970
1980 Year
1990
2000
2010
Source: Butchart et al. (in prep.).
Source: www.birdlife.org/sowb
5
See www.zeroextinction.org
Image: Lesser Flamingos (James Warwick)
... are also being identified across the oceans
6
AZE sites
IBAs
Many seabird breeding sites and significant coastal areas for non-breeding species are already listed as IBAs. Their boundaries are now being extended to include foraging areas, where appropriate. Work is ongoing to identify IBAs (as Ecologically and Biologically Significant Areas—EBSAs) in the open oceans.
KBAs
A network of IBAs identified around the Iberian Peninsula and in Macaronesia
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
... form networks in the wider landscape
The WOW Critical Site Network Tool displaying the network of IBAs identified for Black-tailed Godwit and the flyways of the four relevant populations See www.wingsoverwetlands.org/csntool
Many birds depend on networks of IBAs. Migrants in particular need sites along their flyways to support all stages of their annual cycles. International collaboration, as in the Wings Over Wetlands (WOW) programme for African-Eurasian migratory waterbirds, is vital to achieve this.
The percentage of Ugandan butterfly species represented in Ugandan IBAs in each of six conservation priority categories
% of Ugandan species
7
... support a wealth of other biodiversity
IBA / KBA / AZE relationships
Wherever possible IBA identification and documentation are led by the BirdLife Partner organisation in-country. This feeds the best local knowledge into the process and builds engagement and capacity for conservation and monitoring. By mid-2010, five continental directories and 126 national IBA inventories had been published, in a variety of languages.
Bicoloured Antvireo
Number of publications
...
2
Mean
Image: Rhinocerus Hornbill (Dr Chan Ah Lak)
Important Bird Areas
The world’s 10,000 IBAs and their protection status by region
... are documented through a bottom-up process
Sources: Ramírez et al. (2008) Áreas Importantes para as Aves Marinhas em Portugal. Lisboa: Sociedade Portuguesa Para o Estudo das Aves. Lisboa. Arcos et al. (2009) Áreas Importantes para la Conservación de las Aves marinas en España. Madrid: Sociedad Española de Ornitología (SEO/BirdLife). Two recently published marine IBA inventories can be accessed here: Portugal http://lifeibasmarinhas.spea.pt/y-book/ibasmarinhas, Spain www.seo.org/avesmarinas/flash.html#/1
1
2
3
4
Conservation priority score
5
6 Source: www.birdlife.org/sowb
Management scenarios for African Important Bird Areas, based on the turnover of species projected under climate change
The Integrated Biodiversity Assessment Tool (IBAT) provides decision-makers with critical information so that biodiversity considerations can be integrated at the earliest stages of project planning. Spatial information on IBAs is used by IBAT to help inform environmental impact assessments, management plans and business operations.
9
... facilitate implementation of international agreements
See www.ibatforbusiness.org
Examples of ecosystem services
Image: Garth Lenz/BirdLife
Water
Harvested goods
Designed by Justine Pocock/NatureBureau
... enable adaptation to climate change Robust measures are needed to maintain biodiversity in the face of climate change. These include efforts to maximise the resilience of ecosystems and facilitate their adaptation to climate change impacts. Modelling such impacts is providing critical insight into likely patterns of enforced changes on the distribution of birds, and so helping to develop adaptive management frameworks for IBAs.
2006
Pressure 2
Greater threats
s
c
3
1 0
2002
2004
2006
a
2000
M 1
More action
e
Response
0 1998
10.000 sites à sauver
2000
2002 Year
2004
2006
Source: Mwangi et al. (2010) Bird Conserv. Internat. 20: 215-230
IBAs across the world are monitored using BirdLife’s standardised and simple methods for scoring their condition (based on the key species and habitats within them), the pressures (threats) that impact them and the conservation responses in place (such as action plans and management activities). Such monitoring, carried out by local groups, volunteers, government staff and BirdLife Partners, generates data for IBA indices that provide powerful tools for quantifying conservation efforts and measuring their impact.
14
10,000 個需要拯救的地方
13
40
20
0
198 LCGs at 119 IBAs in Africa in 2009
Financial services
2004
1230 Number of IBAs in Africa
Harvesting of resources
2002
60
Education and awareness creation
2000
... are monitored to inform policy and action
Some key facts about African LCGs
80
Alternative livelihood improvement activities
Better condition
e
0
o
1
r
2
Activities undertaken by African LCGs
Conservation action
Protected Areas Unprotected Areas
State
Image: BirdLife International
Image: Flickr/guilherme_florian
100
Conservation planning
3
2
10,000 sites to save
Carbon
Tourism
Image: Flickr/number657
3
www.birdlife.org
Colours represent different scenarios, with associated management recommendations:
Source: Hole et al. (in prep.).
n
15
11
High persistence Increasing specialisation High turnover Increasing value Increasing diversification
Important Bird Area indices for Kenya, showing trends in the state of IBAs, pressures upon them, and responses in place
… are being saved through the conservation efforts of BirdLife working with governments and others worldwide
... provide essential ecosystem services
IBA conservation maintains biodiversity and ensures sustained flow of numerous ecosystem services to local communities (e.g. harvested wild goods), regionally or nationally (e.g. water) and globally (e.g. carbon sequestration, tourism).
Home page of the Integrated Biodiversity Assessment Tool
IBA information is relevant to a number of Multilateral Environmental Agreements. For the Ramsar Convention, IBA identification criteria are closely aligned with those used to select wetland sites of international importance. Thus, IBAs that potentially qualify as Ramsar sites, but have yet to be designated, can easily be highlighted. Source: BirdLife International (2005) Important Bird Areas and potential Ramsar sites in Asia. Cambridge, UK: BirdLife International
10
Research and monitoring
8
... inform environmentally responsible development
Number of LCGs
The IBAs in the Asia region that contain areas which qualify as potential Ramsar sites
See www.africa-climate-exchange.org
58% of LCGs legally registered
200 Highest number of members in a single LCG 29 Highest number of LCGs in one country 18 Most LCGs associated with one IBA 8 Highest number of IBAs covered with one LCG Source: BirdLife International
Understanding the consequences of poverty is essential in identifying how biodiversity conservation can improve local livelihoods. BirdLife Partners work with and empower local communities at IBAs to develop site-specific solutions to conservation and development challenges.
The range of benefits that communities obtain from IBAs Source: www.birdlife.org/sowb
Natmataung National Park, Myanmar
... are a focus for local engagement in conservation Since the late 1990s, BirdLife has been nurturing and networking grassroots groups at IBAs. Numbering over 2,500 worldwide and known as Local Conservation Groups (LCGs), they encourage local participation in conservation and often focus on the most marginalised community members (for example, by formalising land rights for indigenous people, and ensuring that women or members of low status groups are included in decision-making).
10.000 sitios para salvar
12
... are vital for livelihoods and wellbeing
Non-timber forest products (including food & medicines) Meat / fish Grazing / browse Live animals / pet trade Firewood / charcoal Timber Water provison Employment / tourism Ceremony / religion Shelter
10,000 территорий подлежат охране
Palas Valley, Pakistan
Montecristo & El Imposible National Parks, El Salvador
Mt Afadjato-Agumatsa, Ghana Upper Bay of Panama, Panama
Bajo Rio Beni, Bolivia
Kibira National Park, Burundi
San Rafael National Park, Paraguay
Musambwa Islands, Lake Victoria, Uganda Dar es Salaam coast, Tanzania
Truong Son, Vietnam Palbong Sablayan, Occidental Mindoro, Philippines Sekong River, Cambodia
Eastern Highlands, Zimbabwe
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