No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Conservation success for two Bermudan bird species
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 April 2009
Extract
Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.
The plight of indigenous birds on oceanic archipelagoes often makes depressing reading, as the author points out in his forthcoming book, Naturalized Mammals of the World. Habitat destruction by domestic stock and predation by accidentally introduced rats and mice are the major causes. In Bermuda this discouraging trend has been reversed by the successful rehabilitation of two species within the space of a quarter of a century.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1984
References
Fisher, J., Simon, N. and Vincent, J. 1969. The Red Book—Wildlife in Danger. Collins, London.Google Scholar
Greenway, J.C. 1958. Extinct and vanishing birds of the world. Spec. Publs Am. Comm. int. wildlife Prot. 13.Google Scholar
Halliday, T. 1978. Vanishing Birds—their Natural History and Conservation. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.Google Scholar
King, W.B. 1981. Endangered Birds of the World—the ICBP Bird Red Data Book. Smithsonian Institution Press/ICBP, Washington.Google Scholar
Murphy, R.C. and Mowbray, L.S. 1951. New light on the Cahow. Pterodroma cahow. Auk, 68, 266–280.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palmer, R.S. (ed.) 1962. Handbook of North American Birds. Vol. 1. Yale University Press, New Haven.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, H.C. 1950. Spanish intentions for Bermuda 1603–1615 as revealed by the records in the archives of the Indies. Seville, Spain. Bermuda Hist. Quart. 7(2), 56.Google Scholar
Wingate, D.B. (ed.) 1965. Commentarium of J.T. Bartram, naturalist of 19th century Bermuda. Bermuda Hist. Quart. 22, 1–34.Google Scholar
Wingate, D.B. 1973. A Checklist and Guide to the Birds of Bermuda. Bermuda Press, Hamilton.Google Scholar
Wingate, D.B. 1977. In Endangered Birds: Management Techniques for Preserving Threatened Species (Ed. Temple, S.A). University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Wingate, D.B. 1982. Successful reintroduction of the Yellow-Crowned Night-Heron as a nesting resident on Bermuda. Colonial Waterbirds, 5, 104–115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wurster, C.F. and Wingate, D.B. 1968. DDT residues and declining reproduction in the Bermuda Petrel. Science, 159, 979–981.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zimmerman, D.R. 1975. To Save a Bird in Peril. Coward, McCann and Geoghegan, New York.Google Scholar