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Birds Korea ChecklistOctober 2007
- Introduction
The Birds Korea
Checklist, from October 2007, covers the whole of Korea (i.e. all
southern and northern provinces and adjacent islands and marine
areas). It also includes basic status assessments, based on
unpublished data and extensive literature review (see Appendix Two
for references).
The
Birds Korea Checklist is divided into four categories.
- Category 1
contains all species which have been recorded in 1980 or
subsequently, where the identifications have been made by more than
one reliable and experienced observer, in almost all cases supported
by photographs, sound recordings or specimens upon which the
identification can be confirmed independently.
- Category 2
contains those species which were recorded reliably in the period
between the start of ornithological activity in Korea (in the 1880s)
and 1979, but not subsequently, with all such species supported by
extant specimens or by adequate detail in the literature.
- Category 3
contains all those species recorded by single experienced observers,
with such observations unsupported by recognisable photographs,
sound recordings or specimens; those species seen by multiple
observers, but to a level considered inadequate to claim a national
first record; and in a few cases, species plausibly identified
through specimens which are now lost, or are in too poor condition,
or are too inaccessible, to re-evaluate.
- Category 4
contains species that are listed in the Korean National Parks
Association Checklist (2006), where evidence seems to be lacking
appropriate to their inclusion in Category 1, 2 or 3 of the Birds
Korea Checklist, including those species likely originating from
non-wild sources.
-
The
Birds Korea Checklist omits at least one further species, the
Red-faced Shag Leucocarbo urile, which is included in the
Korean National Parks Association Checklist (2006), because
literature review and research has already established that its
inclusion is unwarranted.
Names
The Birds Korea Checklist presents
Korean, English and scientific names of all species reported on the
Korean peninsula since the 1880s (the period of earliest known
Korean ornithological survey). English names, scientific names, and
the order follow Gill and Wright (2006). Most Korean names follow
the checklist produced by the Korean National Parks Association
(2006). (For more on the process of coining of Korean names, see
Appendix One.) In some cases alternative Korean and English names
are also provided, either being names that already enjoy wide usage,
or (especially for taxa of special relevance to the region) have
been coined by Birds Korea. In the case of English names, the first
name is always that provided by Gill and Wright (2006), with the
occasional use of brackets around one of the two names to denote
that name’s lack of current usage by Birds Korea.
The Birds Korea
Checklist is not intended as a taxonomic review. However, in a very
few cases (limited to several large gulls, “Far Eastern
Skylark”, and two of the Cettia warblers) some taxa of
especial interest to the Korean peninsula that are not included in
Gill and Wright (2006) are included in the Birds Korea Checklist as
full species. Reasons for their inclusion are provided in the
accompanying Notes. For a very few taxa, trinomials are also
presented in the Scientific Name column. These are taxa for which
simple binomial representation is considered especially misleading.
For such taxa, preferred English alternative names and additional
Notes are also provided.
Further, where
information is adequate, subspecies recorded in Korea that are of
especial potential interest to development of the Checklist (having
been split off from the listed species by other specialist
literature: see Notes and Appendix Two), are also listed in the
Notes.
Status and
Breeding All species have two columns of status codes: one
(“Status”) describing the species’ relative
abundance and seasonality; the other (“Breeding”)
clarifying whether the species has been documented as breeding or
not. Please note that in many cases there is still inadequate
evidence to assess abundance or status with a high level of
confidence.
The following
conventions and codes are used in Category 1, and to some degree in
categories 2, 3 and 4 (see below).
1. Status
The order of the codes is consistent
throughout, with a very few exceptions, with each element separated
by punctuation marks. In the “Status” column, the global
conservation status is listed first (where required); followed by an
observation on trend (where data are considered adequate to make
such an assessment); followed by seasonal status, with the period of
maximum abundance listed first; followed by the geographic area,
only when all records have come from one geographic part of Korea
alone. In a very few cases, the geographic unit (e.g. “So”
or “No”) is given before the season and abundance
indicator, as in the listing for Coturnix japonica. This is
to indicate a very obvious difference in seasonal abundance of the
same species between two separate geographical areas within Korea.
1) Global
Conservation Status
The
codes are used in accordance with Birdlife International (see:
http://www.rdb.or.id
):
a) CR: Critically Endangered.
b) EN: Endangered.
c) VU: Vulnerable.
d) NT: Near-threatened.
2) Trend
In most cases there is insufficient
data to suggest actual population trend (as opposed to perceived
increase due to increased observer activity). Two codes are used to
indicate only remarkable changes in selected species’ actual
abundance between the period up to and including 1950 (based
especially but not exclusively on Austin [1948] and Wolfe [1950]),
compared to the present (based especially but not exclusively on
Tomek [1999, 2002] and Park [2000]).
a) Inc: Increasing.
b) Dec: Decreasing.
3) Seasonality
and Abundance
Five different letters are used in a
wide range of combinations to suggest a species’ seasonality:
a) R: Resident.
b) R(m): Resident and partial
migrant.
c) P: Passage Migrant (i.e. spring
or autumn or both).
d) W: Winter visitor.
e) S: Summer
visitor or summer resident.
Five numbers
(1-5) are used to express estimated abundance since 1980:
f) 1: Numerous (ca 100,000 or more
records or individuals estimated to occur
annually).
g) 2: Rather common/locally common
(between 10,000 and 100,000
records or
individuals estimated to occur annually).
h) 3: Fairly common (between 1000
and 10,000 records or individuals
estimated to
occur annually).
i) 4: Uncommon or rather local
(between 100 and 1000 records or individuals estimated to occur
annually).
j) 5: Scarce or very local (recorded
annually, with probably 100 or more records in total
up between 1980 and the present, and less than 100 records estimated
to occur annually).
For less
regularly-recorded species, the letter “V” is used,
followed by a number (1-5), to indicate all known records (from 1880
to the present):
k) V1: Probably annual (25-99
records or individuals recorded in total up to the present).
l) V2: Recorded scarcely annually,
or less than annually (between ten and 25 records or individuals in
total up to the present).
m) V3: Ten or
fewer records in total up to the present.
n) V4: Species last recorded ten or
more years before the present.
o) V5: Species added to the Birds
Korea Checklist within the past update (starting from August 2007).
On occasion, in
Category 1 only, these codes are also used with a prefix (e.g. W, S)
to indicate that more abundant species also occur more rarely in a
given season. At such times, all such records refer to the period
between 1980 and the present.
In this way, the code combination
“S3, WV3” indicates that a species which is fairly
common in summer has also been recorded less than 10 known times in
the mid-winter period between 1980 and the present.
4)
Geographic Area
Provided
in columns on “Abundance
and seasonality”
and “Breeding” only for those species which have been
recorded in one of the units of area alone.
a)
No: north of approximately 38 D North.
b)
So: south of approximately 38 D North.
c)
N-N: Far northern provinces: Pyonganbuk, Chagang, Yanggang,
Hamgyeongnam, Hamgyeongbuk.
d)
N-C: Northern-central provinces: Pyongannam, Hwanghaebuk,
Hwanghaenam, northern Gangwon.
e)
C-W: Central-western provinces: Gyeonggi, Chungchongnam,
Chungchongbuk.
f)
C-E: Central-eastern provinces: southern Gangwon, Gyeongsangbuk.
g)
S-S: southern provinces: Jeollabuk, Jeollanam, Gyeongsangnam,
excluding Jeju and the southern coastal zone.
h)
S-C: Southern Coastal Zone, all islands and within ca 20km of the
coast in Jeollabuk, Jeollanam, Jeju, Gyeongsangnam and Gyeonsangbuk
provinces.
2. Breeding
Six codes are used:
a) C: Breeding Confirmed. Breeding
confirmed by unambiguous evidence (photographs, specimens or
detailed notes) of one or more of the following: nest, eggs,
flightless or poor-flying juveniles food-begging from adults.
b) P: Presumed Breeding. Breeding
can be presumed, in the absence of unambiguous evidence as above,
when a sedentary or near sedentary species is recorded across years
in suitable breeding habitat during the breeding season; or when a
pair or more of a species shows obvious breeding-related behaviour
in appropriate habitat and season. Most presumed breeders have been
identified as such in the relevant literature.
c) S: Suspected breeding. Breeding
is suspected in the absence of unambiguous evidence, when a pair or
more of a species is either in potentially suitable breeding habitat
during the breeding season, or when young full-winged juveniles of a
species have been observed in mid-summer, outside the period of
usual occurrence.
d) (S): Species Suspected to breed
by earlier authors, but for which the evidence seems less than
compelling.
e) (br): According to the available
Korea-specific literature, either confirmed or presumed to have bred
historically (pre-1950) but not subsequently.
f) Blank: Believed not to breed in
Korea, either historically or at present, in a very few cases
contrary to earlier Korea-specific literature.
The first five
(a-e) of the following six symbols can in turn be followed by codes
for “Geographic Area” as outlined above.
3. Additional
Codes
1) Category 2
In Category 2, the “Status”
column provides information different from that given for species in
Category 1. In Category 2, each species contains an assessment of
global conservation status (as above); followed by:
a) The number of published records
of that species;
b) The year of
the last confirmed record.
Use of geographic codes in both the
“Status” and the “Breeding” columns are as
in Category 1 above.
2) Category 3
In Category 3, the “Notes”
column contains four additional codes, SR, SP, PH, PUB:
a) SR: Sight Record.
b) SP: Specimen Record, when there
are reasonable doubts as the identification of the specimen, due to
its age or inaccessibility.
c) PH: Photograph Record, when the
photograph fails to reveal diagnostic identification features, or to
indicate that the photograph was taken inside of Korea.
d) PUB: Published, when the basis of
the record seems unclear or disputed.
(Please go to the Appendix One for Additional Information on the development of the
Birds Korea Checklist, and Appendix Two for References in the Birds Korea Checklist Introduction PDF-document.)
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