Welcome to BirdLife Australia!As of 1 January 2012, BOCA has merged with Birds Australia to become BirdLife Australia. The new BirdLife Australia website will go live in early February, and until then the current BOCA site will continue to be available. At BirdLife Australia we are dedicated to achieving outstanding conservation results for our native birds and their habitats. With our specialised knowledge and the commitment of an Australia-wide network of members, volunteers and supporters, we are creating a bright future for Australia’s birds. Look out for our new website from February 2012 at birdlife.org.au |
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Victorian Bird ReportThe Victorian Bird Report (VBR) is a listing of significant sightings of birds seen in Victoria over a calendar year. Presented in taxonomic order, it is a fascinating record of what was new (e.g., new species for Victoria), what different (e.g. variations in numbers or distribution) together with more routine sightings (such as arrival and departure dates of migrants and breeding records of significant species). It provides a useful place for publication of interesting personal records not published in more formal journals and helps build a resource supporting the scientific basis for bird conservation. The VBR was first published by BOCA between 1981 and 1987 but then lapsed until 2001. In that year, a joint publication by BOCA and Birds Australia was initiated under the editorship of Stuart Cooney. VBRs for 2001 & 2002 have now been published: 2003-4 is now in preparation. Limited numbers of the VBR are for sale in the Blue Wren Gift Shop or can be consulted in the BOCA Library. Records for the VBR can be submitted on the Report a sighting form.
It seems like only yesterday that Stuart Cooney first appeared on the Victorian birding scene, but in only a few years he has had a stint on the Birds Australia VicGroup committee, played an active role at the bird hide at Edithvale wetland, setup Birdline Victoria to provide up-to-the-minute reporting of bird records on the internet, and reinvigorated and revamped the VBR. Improvements to the VBR include comprehensive inclusion of noteworthy records from the Atlas of Victorian Wildlife, latest conservation status, and prompt publication. Thank you to all observers who contributed records for these Bird Reports and to the Atlas of Victorian Wildlife, and especially to those who went to the trouble of providing data and summaries from their projects or regular surveys. Of course, the greatest thanks and congratulations must go to Stuart for taking the initiative - and then the time, effort and grief - to put the Reports together. It's a difficult job to get the VBR up and running again after a lapse of several years, but the Reports are always essential and convenient (and now timely) information sources for anyone seeking to understand the distribution and occurrence of Victoria's avifauna. Viva la VBR! Links to other items in Publications
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