2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.japb.2018.06.007
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An avifaunal survey of middle Mongolian wetlands: Important Bird Areas and threatened species

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…4.5 ka cal BP. The absence of avian petroglyphs at Khutag Nuur is unusual, seeing that Mongolian wetlands are hotspots for bird diversity (Gombobaatar et al, 2012;Ganbold et al, 2018), and they are present at Gazar Agui 13 and other Bronze Age sites (Kubarev and Zabelin, 2006). Bird petroglyphs at Gazar 13 likely reflect the important role that this area played in avian migrations.…”
Section: Environment and Biogeographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4.5 ka cal BP. The absence of avian petroglyphs at Khutag Nuur is unusual, seeing that Mongolian wetlands are hotspots for bird diversity (Gombobaatar et al, 2012;Ganbold et al, 2018), and they are present at Gazar Agui 13 and other Bronze Age sites (Kubarev and Zabelin, 2006). Bird petroglyphs at Gazar 13 likely reflect the important role that this area played in avian migrations.…”
Section: Environment and Biogeographymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Waterbodies are highly productive regions and can support a vast array of biodiversity, including inverte-brates, fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals; and often considered as repositories of biodiversity (Singh and Brraich, 2022;Anand et al, 2023 and-Parul andKumar, 2023). Birds make wide use of these aquatic environments for activities such as nourishment, breeding, nesting, roosting, and sometimes as stopover sites (Ganbold et al, 2018;Panda et al, 2021; Yashmita-Ulman and Singh, 2022; Anand et al, 2023 andMuralikrishnan et al, 2023). The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Changes recently increased India's Ramsar sites to 75 by incorporating 21 more wetlands covering a total surface area of 13,26,677 hectares.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Wetlands are important for both resident and migratory birds. They are used by birds for various purposes such as foraging, breeding, roosting, and nesting habitats, and sometimes also as stopover sites (Ganbold et al 2018;Kumar & Sharma 2018;Panda et al 2021;Yashmita-Ulman & Singh 2022;Anand et al 2023;Muralikrishnan et al 2023). Birds are extremely sensitive to changes in their habitats such as human disturbance, poisoning, pollution, eutrophication, and siltation; therefore, they can be used as an excellent ecological indicator for assessing the quality, productivity, and stability of wetlands (Mistry et al 2008;Amat & Green 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of the 1,353 bird species reported from various habitats within the geographical limits of India (Praveen & Jayapal 2023), 310 are recognised to be dependent on wetlands (Kumar et al 2005). However, wetlands in India, as elsewhere, are facing anthropogenic pressures like conversion of wetlands into agricultural lands or for commercial fishing purposes, industrial pollution, fertilisers run-off from surrounding agricultural fields, hunting, unsustainable harvest of wetland resources, invasion of alien species, eutrophication, and draining of water for agricultural purposes (Ganbold et al 2018;Kumar & Sharma 2018;Mandal et al 2021;Panda et al 2021;Rashiba et al 2022;Yashmita-Ulman & Singh 2022). This threatens the existing avifaunal diversity of wetlands.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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