Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Testing hypotheses about biological invasions and Charles Darwin’s two-creators rumination
- Part I Ancient invaders
- Part II Modern invaders
- 13 Invasion by woody shrubs and trees
- 14 Modern tree colonisers from Australia into the rest of the world
- 15 Failed introductions: finches from outside Australia
- 16 The skylark
- 17 Why northern hemisphere waders did not colonise the south
- 18 Weak migratory interchange by birds between Australia and Asia
- 19 Introducing a new top predator, the dingo
- 20 The European rabbit
- 21 The rise and fall of the Asian water buffalo in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia
- 22 A critique of ecological theory and a salute to natural history
- Index
- References
17 - Why northern hemisphere waders did not colonise the south
from Part II - Modern invaders
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Testing hypotheses about biological invasions and Charles Darwin’s two-creators rumination
- Part I Ancient invaders
- Part II Modern invaders
- 13 Invasion by woody shrubs and trees
- 14 Modern tree colonisers from Australia into the rest of the world
- 15 Failed introductions: finches from outside Australia
- 16 The skylark
- 17 Why northern hemisphere waders did not colonise the south
- 18 Weak migratory interchange by birds between Australia and Asia
- 19 Introducing a new top predator, the dingo
- 20 The European rabbit
- 21 The rise and fall of the Asian water buffalo in the monsoonal tropics of northern Australia
- 22 A critique of ecological theory and a salute to natural history
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
While much of the (avi)fauna of the southern hemisphere is unique, most of the water-, shore- and seabirds have close ties with the northern hemisphere. Some of the latter are closely related to species breeding further north, while others only visit the southern hemisphere as non-breeders. This is not surprising. Waterbirds are highly mobile and many species can disperse over very long distances. However, within the waterbirds, there is a puzzling bias in the taxonomic distribution of species that breed in the southern hemisphere versus those that only visit during the non-breeding season. The majority of waterbird groups have breeding representatives on both hemispheres. For example, we find breeding ducks, cranes, herons and gulls in both the southern and the northern hemisphere. Only a small number of high-latitude taxa, such as penguins and diving petrels in the Antarctic and divers and alcids in the Arctic are restricted to one hemisphere. The major exception to this pattern are waders. Many waders of the genera Calidris, Tringa, Pluvialis, Limosa and others visit the southern hemisphere each year in large numbers. None of these has established breeding populations in the south. The reason for their remarkable absence as breeders is the topic of this chapter.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Invasion Biology and Ecological TheoryInsights from a Continent in Transformation, pp. 373 - 388Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014