Dataset

Australian Waterbird Surveys (1983-2018)

OBIS Australia Open in mapper Explore occurrences

The Australian Aerial Waterbird Surveys (AWS) database stores temporal and spatial waterbird data on individual species, their breeding status and estimates of wetland area, collected during annual aerial surveys, extending back to 1983. The core methodology for these surveys has remained the same. The database includes three principal survey programs: The Eastern Australian Waterbird Survey, the National Waterbird Survey and surveys of the major wetland sites in the Murray-Darling Basin. Since 1983, the Eastern Australian Waterbird Survey has covered about a third of the continent each October, representing one of the larger and longer running biodiversity surveys in Australia, sampling wetland and waterbird communities across 2.7 million km2 of eastern Australia. In 2008, we did aerial surveys over most large wetlands across Australia during a period of two months. Since 2010, we have comprehensively surveyed all the major wetlands in the Murray-Darling Basin. This dateset is subset of species that have been identified as marine in the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS). The data can be downloaded at https://aws.ecosystem.unsw.edu.au/

Citation: Kingsford, R.T., Porter, J.L., Brandis, K.J. et al. Aerial surveys of waterbirds in Australia. Sci Data 7, 172 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-020-0512-9

Published: June 07, 2022 at 05:52

URL: https://www.marine.csiro.au/ipt/resource?r=aws_surveys

Richard Kingsford
University of New South Wales

38,402
occurrence records
46
taxa
45
species

Taxa

Missing and invalid fields

Field Missing Invalid
decimalLatitude 2,987
7.8%
decimalLongitude 2,987
7.8%
scientificNameID 116
0.3%

Quality flags

The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.

Flag Dropped Records
ON_LAND 34,413
89.6%
DEPTH_EXCEEDS_BATH 22,772
59.3%
NO_COORD 2,987
7.8%
NO_MATCH 116
0.3%
WORMS_ANNOTATION_REJECT_HABITAT 116
0.3%

Measurement types

DNA derived data