Litcius/Paper detail

State of the World's Birds

Alexander Charles Lees, Lucy E. Haskell, Tris Allinson, Simeon Bezeng Bezeng, Ian J. Burfield, Luis Miguel Renjifo, Kenneth V. Rosenberg, Ashwin Viswanathan, Stuart H. M. Butchart

2022Annual Review of Environment and Resources239 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present an overview of the global spatiotemporal distribution of avian biodiversity, changes in our knowledge of that biodiversity, and the extent to which it is imperilled. Birds are probably the most completely inventoried large taxonomic class of organisms, permitting a uniquely detailed understanding of how the Anthropocene has shaped their distributions and conservation status in space and time. We summarize the threats driving changes in bird species richness and abundance, highlighting the increasingly synergistic interactions between threats such as habitat loss, climate change, and overexploitation. Many metrics of avian biodiversity are exhibiting globally consistent negative trends, with the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List Index showing a steady deterioration in the conservation status of the global avifauna over the past three decades. We identify key measures to counter this loss of avian biodiversity and associated ecosystemservices, which will necessitate increased consideration of the social context of bird conservation interventions in order to deliver positive transformative change for nature.

Topics & Concepts

BiodiversityAnthropoceneContext (archaeology)OverexploitationGeographySpecies richnessEcologyClimate changeHabitat destructionHabitatDistribution (mathematics)Conservation statusIUCN Red ListConservation biologyAbundance (ecology)Environmental resource managementBiologyEnvironmental scienceMathematicsArchaeologyMathematical analysisSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeWildlife Ecology and ConservationEcology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies