BirdLife Australia is working with the King Island Birds Recovery Team and others to coordinate the recovery of five threatened birds endemic to King Island.
Over 70% of King Island’s native vegetation has been cleared. The remaining native vegetation is fragmented, leaving birds’ habitats and populations disconnected. Possibly only 50-100 King Island Brown Thornbills and ~50 King Island Scrubtits survive.
Over 70% of King Island’s native vegetation has been cleared. The remaining native vegetation is fragmented, leaving birds’ habitats and populations disconnected.
Possibly only 50-100 King Island Brown Thornbills and ~50 King Island Scrubtits survive.
Habitat loss and other threats have driven the decline of many of King Island’s endemic birds, including the extinct King Island Emu. The King Island Brown Thornbill and King Island Scrubtit will likely go extinct by 2038 unless we intervene now.
BirdLife Australia, together with the King Island Birds Recovery Team, coordinates actions towards the following objectives:
BirdLife Australia has supported the recovery of King Island’s threatened birds by:
The King Island Brown Thornbill is an Endangered subspecies of the Brown Thornbill.
The King Island Scrubtit is a Critically Endangered subspecies of the Tasmanian Scrubtit.