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This article is a parent page for a series of articles providing information about endemism among birds in the World\'s various zoogeographic zones.
The term endemic, in the context of bird endemism, refers to any species found only in a specific area. There is no upper size limit for the geographical area. It would not be incorrect to refer to all bird species as endemic to Earth; in practice, however, the largest areas for which the term is in common use are countries (e.g. New Zealand endemics) or zoogeographical regions and subregions (West Indies endemics).
Birdlife International has defined the term restricted-range endemic as any species whose historical range is less than 50,000km².
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Endemism is particularly notable when not just a particular species is confined to given areas, but a whole higher-level taxon (e.g. genus, family or even order).
Almost all orders are represented on at least two continents. The orders with the most-restricted range are the mousebirds (Coliiformes), found only in sub-Saharan Africa and the tinamous, found only in South and Central America.
At the level of family, endemism is exhibited widely. Examples include:
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Birdlife International has defined the concept of an Endemic Bird Area (EBA). This is a region of the world which contains two or more restricted range species.
To support this, they have also introduced the Secondary Area concept, for areas which contain one or more restricted-range species.
See also:
Birdlife International has produced two publications on endemism in birds:
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
The Palaearctic
The Afrotropics and Malagasy regions
The Oriental region
Australasia & the Pacific
North America
South America
Other
| Endemism in birds | |
|---|---|
| Regional overviews
The Palaearctic: Western Palearctic | Central Asia | Japan | |
| Lists of: Endemic Bird Areas | Secondary Areas | |
| Literature: Putting biodiversity on the map | Endemic Bird Areas of the World | |
| Categories: Regional overviews | Endemic higher-level taxa | Restricted range endemics | |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia