BirdLife

BirdLife Species Champions appeal
Donate to this groundbreaking initiative so that together we can turn the tide on bird extinctions.

Global Species Programme

Tony Crittenden (www.tcphotos.net)
Years of drought have seriously affected the vegetation on which Mallee Emuwren relies
Zoom In | Hi-Res

BirdLife International is the leading authority on the conservation of the world's birds. Through its Global Species Programme, BirdLife has collated, assessed and published information on the world's threatened birds for over 25 years.

Since the first compilation in the late 1970s, a series of detailed regional Red Data Books has been published, covering Africa (1985), the Americas (1992) and most recently, Asia (1999). Global checklists of all the world’s threatened birds were published as Birds to watch (1988), Birds to watch 2 (1994), Threatened birds of the world (2000), and Threatened birds of the world 2004 CD-ROM. The content of the most up-to-date iteration: Threatened birds of the world 2008 is now freely available through the Data Zone on the BirdLife website and it will be published as a new CD-ROM later in 2008. Threatened birds of the world now contains factsheets and additional data tables for all the world's birds, including, all c.8,000 Least Concern species.

BirdLife collates information from a global network of experts and collaborating organisations and from publications and unpublished sources to assess each species's extinction risk, using the categories and criteria of the IUCN Red List.

Information on Globally Threatened Birds is used to focus global conservation efforts and to guide BirdLife's priorities for action. It is therefore essential that data on Globally Threatened Birds are kept up to date and regularly reviewed and revised.

BirdLife strives to continually update its information on Globally Threatened Birds. If you have new updates or corrections to information on any of the species factsheets, please email us. Contributors who supply information that is used will be explicitly acknowledged. Species factsheets are periodically updated and available through the Data Zone.

You can see which species are currently having their IUCN Red List category actively reviewed (for example, because of new information on population or range size and trends, or threats) by visiting the Globally Threatened Bird Forums, where you can contribute relevant information or comment.

Next Page » Birds on the IUCN Red List


In this Section

Global Species Prog.

IUCN Red List

What's new

GTB Forums

See Also

Data Zone - Search Species

Short-tailed Albatross chicks moved out of ...

Globally threatened birds pay for their sex

Unique wader faces extinction

Cherry-picked for conservation award

Bald Ibis adults tracked to wintering ground

Globally Threatened Birds

Printer friendly view

Subscribe to News

 Bookmark & Share Bookmark & Share