¡¡¡¡Lei, J., Jia, Y., Zuo, A., Zeng, Q., Shi, L., Zhou, Y., Zhang, H., Lu,
C., Lei, G. and Wen, L., 2019. Bird Satellite Tracking Revealed
Critical Protection Gaps in East Asian¨CAustralasian Flyway.
International journal of environmental research and public health,
16(7), p.1147. (°×¶îÑ㣬С°×¶îÑ㣬¶¹Ñ㣬ºèÑ㣬»ÒÑã)
¡¡¡¡Most migratory birds depend on stopover sites, which are essential
for refueling during migration and affect their population dynamics. In
the East Asian¨CAustralasian Flyway (EAAF), however, the stopover ecology
of migratory waterfowl is severely under-studied. The knowledge gaps
regarding the timing, intensity and duration of stopover site usages
prevent the development of effective and full annual cycle conservation
strategies for migratory waterfowl in EAAF. In this study, we obtained a
total of 33,493 relocations and visualized 33 completed spring
migratory paths of five geese species using satellite tracking devices.
We delineated 2,192,823 ha as the key stopover sites along the migration
routes and found that croplands were the largest land use type within
the stopover sites, followed by wetlands and natural grasslands (62.94%,
17.86% and 15.48% respectively). We further identified the conservation
gaps by overlapping the stopover sites with the World Database on
Protected Areas (PA). The results showed that only 15.63% (or 342,757
ha) of the stopover sites are covered by the current PA network. Our
findings fulfil some key knowledge gaps for the conservation of the
migratory waterbirds along the EAAF, thus enabling an integrative
conservation strategy for migratory water birds in the flyway.