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Vietnam
species
Vietnam is home to nearly 850 bird species. Of
these species, 33 are considered to be globally
threatened, meaning that they are threatened
with extinction worldwide. Twenty two species
are termed restricted-range species, meaning
that their global breeding range is less than
50,000 kmē. Ten of these restricted-range
species are believed to be endemic to Vietnam,
meaning that they occur nowhere else in the
world.
It is BirdLife's vision that there be no loss of
globally threatened or restricted-range bird
species from Vietnam.
Vietnam's threatened bird species
|
English name
|
Latin name
|
Status
|
|
CRITICAL (CR) |
|
White-shouldered Ibis |
Pseudibis davisoni |
|
|
Giant Ibis |
Thaumatibis gigantea |
|
|
Slender-billed Vulture |
Gyps tenuirostris |
|
|
White-rumped Vulture |
Gyps bengalensis |
|
|
ENDANGERED (EN) |
|
Greater Adjutant |
Leptoptilos dubius |
N |
|
Spoon-billed Sandpiper |
Eurynorhynchus pygmeus |
|
|
Black-faced Spoonbill |
Platalea minor |
N |
|
White-winged Duck |
Cairina scutulata |
|
|
Orange-necked Partridge |
Arborophila davidi |
* |
|
Edwards's Pheasant |
Lophura edwardsi |
* |
|
Vietnamese Pheasant |
Lophura hatinhensis |
* |
|
Bengal Florican |
Houbaropsis bengalensis |
|
|
White-eared Night-heron |
Gorsachius magnificus |
|
|
Scaly-sided Merganser |
Mergus squamatus |
|
|
Spotted Greenshank |
Tringa guttifer |
N |
|
Collared Laughingthrush |
Garrulax yersini |
* |
|
Grey-crowned Crocias |
Crocias langbianis |
* |
|
VULNERABLE (VU) |
|
Spot-billed Pelican |
Pelecanus philippensis |
N |
|
Chinese Egret |
Egretta eulophotes |
N |
|
Lesser Adjutant |
Leptoptilos javanicus |
|
|
Baer's Pochard |
Aythya baeri |
N |
|
Greater Spotted Eagle |
Aquila clanga |
N |
|
Imperial Eagle |
Aquila heliaca |
N |
|
Germain's Peacock-pheasant |
Polyplectron germaini |
* |
|
Crested Argus |
Rheinardia ocellata |
|
|
Green Peafowl |
Pavo muticus |
|
|
Sarus Crane |
Grus antigone |
|
|
Masked Finfoot |
Heliopais personata |
|
|
Wood Snipe |
Gallinago nemoricola |
N |
|
Black-necked Crane |
Grus nigricollis |
N |
|
Saunders's Gull |
Larus saundersi |
N |
|
Indian Skimmer |
Rynchops albicollis |
|
|
Pale-capped Pigeon |
Columba punicea |
|
|
Rufous-necked Hornbill |
Aceros nipalensis |
|
|
Fairy Pitta |
Pitta nympha |
N |
|
Chenust-eared Laughingthrush |
Garrulax konkakinhensis |
|
|
Golden-winged Laughingthrush |
Garrulax ngoclinhensis |
* |
|
Black-crowned Barwing |
Actinodura sodangorum |
|
|
Manchurian Reed-warbler |
Acrocephalus tangorum |
N |
|
Beautiful Nuthatch |
Sitta formosa |
|
|
NEAR-THREATENED (NT) |
|
Oriental Darter |
Anhinga melanogaster |
|
|
Painted Stork |
Mycteria leucocephala |
N |
|
Black-headed Ibis |
Threskiornis melanocephalus |
|
|
Ferruginous Duck |
Aythya nyroca |
N |
|
Lesser Fish-eagle |
Ichthyophaga humilis |
|
|
Grey-headed Fish-eagle |
Ichthyophaga ichthyaetus |
|
|
Cinereous Vulture |
Aegypius monachus |
|
|
Red-headed Vulture |
Sarcogyps calvus |
|
|
Pallid Harrier |
Circus macrourus |
|
|
White-rumped Falcon |
Polihierax insignis |
|
|
Chestnut-necklaced Partridge |
Arborophila charltonii |
|
|
Siamese Fireback |
Lophura diardi |
|
|
Band-bellied Crake |
Porzana paykullii |
N |
|
Malaysian Plover |
Charadrius peronii |
|
|
Diademed Sandpiper-plover |
Phegornis mitchellii |
N |
|
Asian Dowitcher |
Limnodromus semipalmatus |
N |
|
Black-bellied Tern |
Sterna acuticauda |
|
|
Nicobar Pigeon |
Caloenas nicobarica |
|
|
Ward's Trogon |
Harpactes wardi |
|
|
Blyth's Kingfisher |
Alcedo hercules |
|
|
Great Hornbill |
Buceros bicornis |
|
|
Brown Hornbill |
Anorrhinus tickelli |
|
|
Red-collared Woodpecker |
Picus rabieri |
|
|
Black-hooded Laughingthrush |
Garrulax milleti |
|
|
Short-tailed Scimitar-babbler |
Jabouilleia danjoui |
|
|
Sooty Babbler |
Stachyris herberti |
|
|
Rufous-rumped Grassbird |
Graminicola bengalensis |
|
|
Japanese Paradise-flycatcher |
Terpsiphone atrocaudata |
N |
|
Yellow-billed Nuthatch |
Sitta solangiae |
|
|
Yellow-breasted Bunting |
Emberiza aureola |
|
|
Vietnam Greenfinch |
Carduelis monguilloti |
* |
|
Asian Golden Weaver |
Ploceus hypoxanthus |
|
|
DATA DEFICIENT (DD) |
|
Imperial Pheasant |
Lophura imperialis |
* |
Notes:
(N) indicates that this species is a
non-breeding visitor
(*) indicates an endemic species to the
territory
For more information about globally threatened
species in Vietnam, visit the online version of
Threatened Birds of Asia:
www.rdb.or.id
Conservation priority setting
Resources available for biodiversity
conservation in Vietnam are limited. BirdLife
uses threatened and restricted-range bird
species to set conservation priorities and,
thereby, ensure that these resources are used
most effectively.
Worldwide, BirdLife is in the process of using
threatened and restricted-range bird species,
along with other criteria, to define a global
network of Important Bird Areas or IBAs. IBAs
are globally important sites for bird
conservation.
The process to define IBAs in Vietnam began in
January 2001. This process is centralising and
standardising data on bird conservation in
Vietnam, and identifying conservation
priorities. Specifically, under-surveyed regions
and habitat types are being indentified, and
currently unprotected sites in need of
conservation action are being highligted . In
2002, BirdLife and the Institute os Ecology and
Biological Resources will publish a directory of
IBAs in Vietnam, which will be used to advocate
suitable conservation measures for all sites
among government decision makers, donors and
other conservation organisations.
Globally threatened species
Many species are in danger of going extinct
worldwide, as a result of habitat loss, hunting
and a range of other factors. If the probability
of a particular species going extinct is
believed to be above a certain threshold, it is
termed a globally threatened species. One of
BirdLife's objectives is to monitor the status
of bird species in Vietnam and to make this data
available to the compilers of the Asian Red Data
Book and Birds to Watch 3, two publications that
contain the list of globally threatened species
in Vietnam.
Of the 33 globally threatened bird species in
Vietnam, most are reasonably well represented
with Vietnam's protected areas system.
Therefore, if Vietnam's protected areas are well
managed, most globally threatened species and
their habitats will be well protected. However,
there are a number of globally threatened
species that, for reasons of their ecology or
because of gaps in the current coverage, are not
adequately represented within the current
protected areas system. In order to overcome
this problem, BirdLife has implemented a number
of projects to focus on these species.
In 1998, BirdLife and the Institute of Ecology
and Biological Resources (IEBR) conducted a
survey for Green Peafowl Pavo muticus in
Dak Lak province, Vietnam. This was one of the
few pieces of quantitative research to be
conducted on a bird species in Vietnam. The
results of the survey indicated that Green
Peafowl was poorly represented within existing
protected areas and recommended expanding Yok
Don National Park to better protect this
species.
Conserving Black-faced Spoonbills
Every year, the coastal zone of the Red River
Delta is home to large numbers of wintering
waterbirds, including several globally
threatened species. These include the endangered
Black-faced Spoonbill Platalea minor. In
some years, one quarter of the global population
of this species winters in northern Vietnam.
BirdLife takes part in the annual global
Black-faced Spoonbill census. In 2000, the total
global population of this species was the
highest recorded since the global census began.
However, the figure for Vietnam was down on
previous years, highlighting the acute threats
that this species faces in Vietnam: principally
hunting and the loss of intertidal mudflats, the
habitat upon which this species depends.
Restricted-range species
There are 22 restricted-range bird species in
Vietnam, all but three of which belong to the
Phasianidae (partridges and pheasants) or the
Sylviidae (babblers and warblers) families. Each
restricted-range species occurs in one or more
Endemic Bird Areas (EBAs). EBAs are areas that
contain the global ranges of at least two
restricted-range species. There are four EBAs in
Vietnam.
The Annamese Lowlands EBA contains the global
ranges of five species: Vietnamese Pheasant
Lophura hatinhensis, Edwards's Pheasant
L. edwardsi, Imperial Pheasant L.
imperialis, Annam Partridge Arborophila
merlini and Sooty Babbler Stachyris
herbeti.
The Kon Tum Plateau EBA contains the global
ranges of three species: Black-crowned Barwing
Actinodura sodangorum, Golden-winged
Laughingthrush Garrulax ngoclinhensis and
Chestnut-eared laughingthrush Garrulax
konkakinhensis.
The Da Lat Plateau EBA contains the global
ranges of three species: Collared Laughingthrush
Garrulax yersini, Grey-crowned Crocias
Crocias langbianis and Vietnamese Greenfinch
Carduelis monguilloti.
The Southern Vietnamese Lowlands EBA contains
the global ranges of two species: Orange- necked
Partridge Arborophila davidi and
Germain's Peacock Pheasant Polyplectron
germaini.
Surveys by BirdLife in the early 1990s
rediscovered several restricted-range species
that had gone unrecorded since their discovery
in the first half of the 20th Century, such as
Grey-crowned Crocias, Sooty Babbler and Imperial
Pheasant. These rediscoveries were made during
wider surveys of Vietnamese EBAs. These surveys
revealed that extensive habitat loss has
occurred in all EBAs, and that conservation
action is urgently required if the remaining
areas of habitat and the restricted-range
species they support are not to be lost forever.
Consequently, one of the central objectives of
BirdLife's strategy in Vietnam has been to
establish at least one protected area within
each EBA. With the establishment of Ke Go Nature
Reserve in the Annamese Lowlands EBA, Ngoc Linh
(Kon Tum) Nature Reserve in the Kon Tum Plateau
EBA and Chu Yang Sin Nature Reserve in the Da
Lat Plateau EBA, and the addition of the Cat Loc
sector to Cat Tien National Park in the Southern
Vietnamese Lowlands EBA, this objective has been
achieved. The priority now is to ensure that
these protected areas receive the financial and
technical support they require to meet their
objectives.
New species
Between 1996 and 1999, BirdLife discovered three
bird species new to science: Golden-winged
Laughingthrush, Black-crowned Barwing and
Chestnut-eared laughingthrush.

Golden-winged Laughingthrush was discovered on
Mt Ngoc Linh, the highest mountain in the
Western Highlands of Vietnam. The species is
known only to occur in montane evergreen forest
above 2,000 m. In 1998, as a result of work by
BirdLife and the Forest Inventory and Planning
Institute (FIPI), Ngoc Linh (Kon Tum) Nature
Reserve was established, protecting forest on
the western face of Mt Ngoc Linh. In 1999,
BirdLife and FIPI completed a feasibility study
for the establishment of Ngoc Linh (Quang Nam)
Nature Reserve, the boundaries of which include
forest on the eastern slopes of the mountain. It
is hoped that this nature reserve will soon be
established, and that the habitats and species
on Mt Ngoc Linh will receive the protection they
deserve.
Black-crowned Barwing was also discovered on Mt
Ngoc Linh but has since been found at nearby
sites in western Kon Tum province in Vietnam and
on the Dakchung plateau in Laos. All the known
localities of this species in Vietnam are
located within Ngoc Linh (Kon Tum) Nature
Reserve.
During a field survey of Mt Kon Ka Kinh, in 1999
Chestnut-eared laughingthrush was discovered.
Efforts to conserve this newly discovered
species were given a boost when Kon Ka Kinh
Nature Reserve was established in 1999. This
species, together with Golden-winged
laughingthrush, was also recorded in Kon Plong
district, Kon Tum province, during survey in
2000.
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