BirdLife: The Magazine Oct - Dec 2019 | Page 7

ASIA The number of species on the priority list of the Asian Songbirds in Trade Specialist Group has risen from 28 to 44. The additions, made at the Asian Songbird Crisis meeting this year, include the Javan Leafbird (below). Burung Indonesia is collaborating on projects to evaluate the last songbird strongholds in Java’s mountains, and better understand the perceptions of the island’s 3,000+ songbird owners. RSCN (BirdLife in Jordan) recently participated in a workshop against the illegal trade of birds of prey, held in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Working alongside organisations such as the International Fund for Houbara Conservation, Ornithological Society of the Middle East, and the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, together they formulated a declaration focusing on collaboration and education. BirdLife Australia has successfully translocated the Mallee Emu-wren back to its former habitat in South Australia after bushfires rendered it locally extinct. After ‘fire-proofing’ the area by controlled burning, eighty birds were moved from Murray- Sunset National Park by a team of translocation experts, who conveyed these tiny birds in breeding pairs, in boxes custom-built by volunteers. NEW MONKEY SPECIES DISCOVERED IN RAPIDLY-DEFORESTED AREA OF AMAZON The discovery of a new species should be a source of fascination and excitement: but when researchers found a new species of marmoset in southwest Pará, Brazil, they knew they already needed to be concerned about its survival. The marmoset, named Mico munduruku in honour of the Munduruku indigenous people who live in the area, was discovered by a team led by Rodrigo Costa Araújo of the National Institute of Amazonian Research, who noticed its unusual white tail. Rodrigo and his team were supported in their research by the Conservation Leadership Programme, a partnership between BirdLife, Fauna & Flora International and the WCS. Sadly, this incredibly species-rich area has suffered extensive illegal logging and agricultural encroachment. More worryingly, four hydroelectric power plants have been approved for construction. Deforestation in the Amazon as a whole has accelerated markedly in recent months: in June 2019, 88% more forest was cleared than in June 2019. See page 22 for more information. PACIFIC OCT-DEC 2019 • BIRDLIFE BIRD BUL L ETIN MIDDLE EAST 7