<div><p>Dryland rivers have considerable flow variability, producing complex ecosystems, processes, and communities of organisms that vary over space and time. They are also among the more vulnerable of the world’s ecosystems. A key strategy for conservation of dryland rivers is identifying and maintaining key sites for biodiversity conservation, particularly protecting the quantity and quality of flow and flooding regimes. Extreme variability considerably challenges freshwater conservation planning. We systematically prioritised wetlands for waterbirds (simultaneously for 52 species), across about 13.5% of the Murray-Darling Basin (1,061,469 km2), using a 30-year record of systematic aerial surveys of waterbird populations. Nine key wetlan...
Background: While agriculture has taken much environmental water in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin...
<p>† Likely driven by high occurrence of Silver gull</p><p>Wetland complexes in the Murray-Darling B...
Key to the conservation of waterbirds on coastal floodplains in Australia is improved management of ...
Dryland rivers have considerable flow variability, producing complex ecosystems, processes, and comm...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Water resource development on rivers significantly affects life cycles of specie...
Colonial waterbirds are particularly dependent on river flows for the critical breeding stage of the...
Biodiversity on floodplains is under increasing pressure as demand for water for human needs expands...
In many lowland floodplains around the world, upriver interferences to flows (weirs, dams, off-takes...
Abstract Background While agri...
The Coorong, South Australia, is a globally significant wetland system, listed in the Ramsar Convent...
Suitable habitat is essential for successful colonial waterbird breeding in ephemeral wetlands locat...
Understanding global patterns of biodiversity change is crucial for conservation research, policies ...
Lake Gregory is located on the edge of the Great Sandy desert, Western Australia. It has contained w...
Australia’s waterbirds are mostly nomadic, capitalising on highly variable aquatic resources i...
The Okavango Delta is renowned as an extraordinary ecosystem of high biodiversity, listed as both a ...
Background: While agriculture has taken much environmental water in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin...
<p>† Likely driven by high occurrence of Silver gull</p><p>Wetland complexes in the Murray-Darling B...
Key to the conservation of waterbirds on coastal floodplains in Australia is improved management of ...
Dryland rivers have considerable flow variability, producing complex ecosystems, processes, and comm...
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Water resource development on rivers significantly affects life cycles of specie...
Colonial waterbirds are particularly dependent on river flows for the critical breeding stage of the...
Biodiversity on floodplains is under increasing pressure as demand for water for human needs expands...
In many lowland floodplains around the world, upriver interferences to flows (weirs, dams, off-takes...
Abstract Background While agri...
The Coorong, South Australia, is a globally significant wetland system, listed in the Ramsar Convent...
Suitable habitat is essential for successful colonial waterbird breeding in ephemeral wetlands locat...
Understanding global patterns of biodiversity change is crucial for conservation research, policies ...
Lake Gregory is located on the edge of the Great Sandy desert, Western Australia. It has contained w...
Australia’s waterbirds are mostly nomadic, capitalising on highly variable aquatic resources i...
The Okavango Delta is renowned as an extraordinary ecosystem of high biodiversity, listed as both a ...
Background: While agriculture has taken much environmental water in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin...
<p>† Likely driven by high occurrence of Silver gull</p><p>Wetland complexes in the Murray-Darling B...
Key to the conservation of waterbirds on coastal floodplains in Australia is improved management of ...