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Hunting threatens migratory waterbirds in the East Asian-Australasian Flyway
A new study led by PhD candidate Eduardo Gallo-Cajiao from The University of Queensland and an international team from thirteen institutions and nine countries shows that migratory birds are…
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Successful application for the WWF Dr Lew Young Grant under the Asian Waterbird Conservation Fund (AWCF)
On the World Migratory Bird Day, WWF-Hong Kong is pleased to announce that the successful application for the 1st WWF Dr Lew Young Grant is the project “Towards an Informed…
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“Year of the Cranes” Story series #4 – Borzya the White-naped Crane who link up 5 countries in the Flyway.
Migratory birds are travelers, they are messengers and connect people from different places. This White-naped Crane named Borzya brought us a story of how she links people from Russia,…
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World Migratory Bird Day 2020 – EAAFP Virtual Fun Day
This year, most of us might have to stay at home for the World Migratory Bird Day, still it can be fun. As the theme of World Migratory Bird…
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EAAFP – 2nd Notification To Partners Of MOP 11
Letter from Mr. Pete Probasco, Chair, EAAFP Management Committee The EAAFP Secretariat is pleased to announce the dates and location for…
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Bringing Good Connections to Life – EAAFP 2020 World Migratory Bird Day Webinar by Theunis Piersma
This year the theme of World Migratory Bird Day is “Birds Connect Our World”, to highlight the importance of conserving and restoring the ecological connectivity and integrity of ecosystems…
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Celebrating World Albatross Day on 19 June, 2020!
To raise awareness that thousands of albatrosses, petrels and shearwaters dying every year as a result of fisheries operations and other…
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“Year of the Cranes” Story series #3 – What do farmers do in winter in Korea? They help to count cranes!
Every year after harvest of rice in Cheorwon, a place in Ro Korea close to the border of DPR Korea, farmers laid down their farming equipment and picked up…
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2020 Black-faced Spoonbill Census Results showed Black-faced Spoonbills population hits record high
The International Black-faced Spoonbill Census 2020 was released. During the 2020 Census, 4,864 Black-faced Spoonbills (BFSs) have been recorded, which is an 9% increase (i.e., 401 individuals) compared…
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Birdwatchers, you can join us to conserve Black-faced Spoonbill! – Call for re-sighting records of individually-marked Black-faced Spoonbills
EAAFP Black-faced Spoonbill Working Group is a group of researchers working on a Black-faced Spoonbill conservation project. One of the goals is to quantify the…
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