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Identifying priority wetland sites in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway for migratory bird conservation

Identifying priority wetland sites in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway for migratory bird conservation
Identifying priority wetland sites in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway for migratory bird conservation
The East Asian-Australasian Flyway (EAAF) is widely recognised to be the most threatened of the eight flyways in the world, with wetlands rapidly lost due to land cover change, unsustainable use, and the wider impacts of climate change. The recently established Regional Flyway Initiative (RFI) aims to bring a set of priority wetlands in the EAAF under improved protection, management, and restoration in 10 Asian countries, while mobilising resources for sustainable agriculture, aquaculture, ecotourism, and other livelihoods for local communities. A major step in the development of this initiative is the identification of priority wetland sites through the application of international criteria, based on modern waterbird count data collated from wetland sites across Asia. Through existing analyses and expert consultations, we short-listed a minimum of 270 internationally important wetlands as candidate localities for further assessment. Count data of EAAF waterbird species was then assessed against international criteria aligned with the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar Convention), the EAAF Partnership’s Flyway Site Network and Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas for each site to iteratively identify a subset of priority sites, drawing on newly available species population thresholds. Each site was scored and ranked using a metric (Prioritisation Criterion 1) calculated from the proportions of every occurring EAAF species against published population thresholds. We identified a total of 147 wetland sites of high conservation priority across the 10 countries, both freshwater and coastal. At least 34 threatened species, including significant proportions of their global populations are represented in this set of 147 sites. To ensure that conservation opportunities are maximised for species and ecosystem services, there is a need to ensure that selected sites and landscapes are reconciled with the conservation and development priorities of each country, ecological connectivity and to evaluate priority sites for their ecosystem services.
Asian Waterbird Census, Convention on wetlands, IUCN red list, Key biodiversity areas, Ramsar, Waterbird conservation, Wetland conservation
2045-2322
Crosby, Mike
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Wee, Shelby Qi Wei
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Yong, Ding Li
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Allport, Gary
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Chowdhury, Sayam
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Gan, Xiaojing
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Hgemeijer, Ward
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Jensen, Arne J.
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Lang, Duncan A.
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Layusa, Cynthia
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Lee, Yoon Kyung
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Mundkur, Taej
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Oh, Heejin
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Shi, Jianbin
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Townshend, Terry
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Watkins, Doug
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Zeng, Qing
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Balint, Lenke
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Barchiesi, Stefano
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Bhargava Gajre, Radhika
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Fairburn, William
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Friess, Daniel A.
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Lambert, Tom
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Lim, Hui Koon
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Ochavo, Karen G. C.
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Pina-Covarrubias, Evelyn
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Tang, Hao
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Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
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et al.
Crosby, Mike
941f33fc-f2bb-45e9-a9db-755e552d9d62
Wee, Shelby Qi Wei
3c530bb0-cfd9-4720-8988-de22e99c12b5
Yong, Ding Li
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Allport, Gary
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Chowdhury, Sayam
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Gan, Xiaojing
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Hgemeijer, Ward
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Jensen, Arne J.
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Lang, Duncan A.
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Layusa, Cynthia
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Lee, Yoon Kyung
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Mundkur, Taej
724bc5a2-eaad-4434-91e5-4ec12a3fbc71
Oh, Heejin
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Shi, Jianbin
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Townshend, Terry
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Watkins, Doug
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Zeng, Qing
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Balint, Lenke
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Barchiesi, Stefano
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Bhargava Gajre, Radhika
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Fairburn, William
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Friess, Daniel A.
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Lambert, Tom
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Lim, Hui Koon
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Ochavo, Karen G. C.
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Pina-Covarrubias, Evelyn
6b6bb501-0031-4d89-93f6-fbe76052f94d
Tang, Hao
7c87a3ad-f0ea-46e1-881e-58900a070b0b
Peh, Kelvin S.-H.
0bd60207-dad8-43fb-a84a-a15e09b024cc

Crosby, Mike, Wee, Shelby Qi Wei and Yong, Ding Li , et al. (2026) Identifying priority wetland sites in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway for migratory bird conservation. Scientific Reports, 16 (1), [1916]. (doi:10.1038/s41598-025-31727-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The East Asian-Australasian Flyway (EAAF) is widely recognised to be the most threatened of the eight flyways in the world, with wetlands rapidly lost due to land cover change, unsustainable use, and the wider impacts of climate change. The recently established Regional Flyway Initiative (RFI) aims to bring a set of priority wetlands in the EAAF under improved protection, management, and restoration in 10 Asian countries, while mobilising resources for sustainable agriculture, aquaculture, ecotourism, and other livelihoods for local communities. A major step in the development of this initiative is the identification of priority wetland sites through the application of international criteria, based on modern waterbird count data collated from wetland sites across Asia. Through existing analyses and expert consultations, we short-listed a minimum of 270 internationally important wetlands as candidate localities for further assessment. Count data of EAAF waterbird species was then assessed against international criteria aligned with the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar Convention), the EAAF Partnership’s Flyway Site Network and Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas for each site to iteratively identify a subset of priority sites, drawing on newly available species population thresholds. Each site was scored and ranked using a metric (Prioritisation Criterion 1) calculated from the proportions of every occurring EAAF species against published population thresholds. We identified a total of 147 wetland sites of high conservation priority across the 10 countries, both freshwater and coastal. At least 34 threatened species, including significant proportions of their global populations are represented in this set of 147 sites. To ensure that conservation opportunities are maximised for species and ecosystem services, there is a need to ensure that selected sites and landscapes are reconciled with the conservation and development priorities of each country, ecological connectivity and to evaluate priority sites for their ecosystem services.

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More information

Submitted date: 6 March 2025
Accepted/In Press date: 4 December 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 December 2025
Published date: 14 January 2026
Keywords: Asian Waterbird Census, Convention on wetlands, IUCN red list, Key biodiversity areas, Ramsar, Waterbird conservation, Wetland conservation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 507398
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507398
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 67676fe5-5c21-4f25-8b8c-9e40777eb679
ORCID for Kelvin S.-H. Peh: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2921-1341

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 08 Dec 2025 18:14
Last modified: 27 Jan 2026 05:01

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Contributors

Author: Mike Crosby
Author: Shelby Qi Wei Wee
Author: Ding Li Yong
Author: Gary Allport
Author: Sayam Chowdhury
Author: Xiaojing Gan
Author: Ward Hgemeijer
Author: Arne J. Jensen
Author: Duncan A. Lang
Author: Cynthia Layusa
Author: Yoon Kyung Lee
Author: Taej Mundkur
Author: Heejin Oh
Author: Jianbin Shi
Author: Terry Townshend
Author: Doug Watkins
Author: Qing Zeng
Author: Lenke Balint
Author: Stefano Barchiesi
Author: Radhika Bhargava Gajre
Author: William Fairburn
Author: Daniel A. Friess
Author: Tom Lambert
Author: Hui Koon Lim
Author: Karen G. C. Ochavo
Author: Evelyn Pina-Covarrubias
Author: Hao Tang
Corporate Author: et al.

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