New Research mapping Seabird Migration Routes Identifies Six Major Bird ‘Super Highways’ - BirdLife International
Mapping the journeys of more than 1,000 seabirds, six brand new migration routes called Ocean Flyways have been launched by BirdLife International today. With seabirds traversing the globe, this new research highlights that international collaboration is paramount to protect our oceans and meet global commitments of protecting 30% of marine areas by 2030.
Annually, millions of birds migrate (sometimes tens of thousands of kilometres) along consistent routes called Flyways. Now, for the first-time, researchers have been able to identify common migration routes used by seabirds to define marine flyways, used by some of the World’s most vulnerable species.
Launched today (Saturday 14 October) on World Migratory Bird Day and Global Bird Weekend, the Ocean Flyways highlight connectivity across our oceans – many species’ journeys span national waters and those beyond the jurisdiction of any one country (the High Seas) – and underline the need for coordinated international conservation action to protect seabirds and other migratory species.
As countries work to meet global commitments of protecting 30% of marine areas by 2030, considering connectivity across sites that are important for species will be critical to building a well-connected network of marine protected areas.
Identifying the Ocean Flyways, the consistent routes followed by a suite of seabird species during their annual migrations, is a key step.
For more than four decades, seabird movements have been tracked with tiny electronic devices. Many of these data sets are hosted on the Seabird Tracking Database, with at least 30 million locations recorded from 160 seabird species and contributions from more than 275 seabird researchers.
