¡¡¡¡Jia, R., Liu, D., Lu, J. and Zhang, G., 2020. Wetland destruction on
migration routes threatens a breeding population of the endangered
black-faced spoonbill (Platalea minor). Global Ecology and Conservation,
p.e01105. (ºÚÁ³ÅýðØ£¬SQBG3621S)
¡¡¡¡To further protect the breeding population of black-faced spoonbills
(Platalea minor), it is important to understand the current conservation
status of breeding distribution sites and migration routes, especially
for important stopover and wintering sites of black-faced spoonbills.
Six individuals were tagged with satellite transmitters at Zhuanghe,
Liaoning Province, northeastern China, in July of 2017 and 2018 to
identify important distribution sites during the breeding period and
detailed migration routes. The results showed that Zhuanghe Bay,
Qingduizi Bay and Dayang Estuary were important feeding and roosting
sites for black-faced spoonbills from August to October. Jiaozhou Bay,
Shandong Province, and Lianyungang and Yancheng, Jiangsu Province, were
important stopover sites during fall migration, and the coastal areas of
Yancheng, Jiangsu; Hangzhou Bay, Zhejiang Province; and Tainan, Taiwan
of China; and the inland areas of Poyang Lake, Jiangxi Province, and
Nanyi Lake, Anhui Province, were important wintering sites. This is the
first study to report the inland migration routes of black-faced
spoonbills in China. Our findings on the key breeding distribution
sites, fall migration routes and current threats (such as aquaculture,
mudflat reclamation and dam construction) have important implications
for the conservation of and global action plan development for the
endangered black-faced spoonbill.