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The mission of the US Fish and Wildlife Service is working with others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, and plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service - Pacific Region
Migratory Birds and Habitat Programs

 

Birds of the Hawaiian and other Pacific Islands

These downloadable files are lists of the species occurring on the Hawaiian Islands and other Pacific Islands over which the United States (thus the Fish and Wildlife Service – FWS) has some jurisdiction. The FWS included these species in the Birds of Conservation Concern 2002 (BCC 2002) for the first time in this edition. The lists attempt to be comprehensive for the islands; species of conservation concern appear in blue print on the downloadable lists (below), while threatened and endangered species appear in red. The FWS consulted experts within and outside the agency regarding the status of these species in order to assign them ranking factor scores, using the same methods and designations used by Partners in Flight, and the waterbird and shorebird initiatives, and as described in the BCC 2002. In brief, the ranking factors are PS = Population Size; BD = Breeding distribution; ND = Nonbreeding distribution; TN = Threats to nonbreeding population; TB = Threats to breeding population; AI = Area importance, i.e. the significance of local population to overall population within the scope of the plans. Factors range from 1 (least concern) to 5 (greatest concern). Species with AI = 1 or 2 are not scored - insufficient evidence to assess risk and/or low relative abundance in region. Some nonbreeding seabirds, especially gulls and terns, roost on the islands. In these instances, where birds are recorded on land the AI is recorded to reflect the magnitude of this occurrence; others are encountered at sea only; these are given an AI = O (Oceanic).
The Conservation Category (CC in the tables) are based on the North American Waterbird Conservation Plan, United States Shorebird Conservation Plan, and Partners in Flight categories for prioritizing species of concern: HI = Highly imperiled; HC = High concern; MC = Moderate concern; LC = Low concern; NCR = Not currently at risk; T1 = Tier 1 species (Partners in Flight - PIF- ranking if sum of ranking factors is > 21, the highest category of concern).

BCRs 67 and 68

‘BCRs’ are Bird Conservation Regions, land areas of more or less uniform habitat adopted by the major bird conservation initiatives as the common area unit in which to focus bird conservation efforts and track populations. The USFWS Pacific Region named two new BCRs for this effort: 67 (Hawaiian Islands) and 68 (other U.S. Pacific Islands). The area encompassed by BCR 67 includes all the islands in the Hawaiian archipelago from hawaii to Kure Atoll. BCR 68 includes the following "territories" and other affiliations of the United States: Howland, Baker, and Jarvis islands, Johnston Atoll, Palmyra Atoll, and Kingman Reef all administered by the USFWS as National Wildlife Refuges; Wake Island; American Samoa; Guam; and Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands. The political relationships of these islands to the United States are defined here.
Birds of Hawaii - BCR 67
Birds of the U.S. Pacific Islands - BCR 68

 

 

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