canberrabirds

FW: A colossal achievement: from the June newsletter of BirdLife Interna

To: "" <>
Subject: FW: A colossal achievement: from the June newsletter of BirdLife International
From: "Mark Clayton via Canberrabirds " <>
Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2025 00:09:37 +0000

Be interested to see how long it all lasts given there will undoubtedly be some bruised egos among the former groups!!

Mark

On 30/06/2025 9:49 am, Andrew Cockburn via Canberrabirds wrote:

The list is already available

 

https://www.avilist.org

 

Poor Peter Kaestner has fallen below 10,000 species with many more species lumped than there are splits.  Four families have been lumped

 

  • Icteriidae with Icteridae (about time)
  • Alcippeidae with Leiothricidae
  • Scotocercidae (but not Erythrocercidae) with Cettidae
  • Bucorvidae with the rest of the hornbills

 

Cheers, Andrew Cockburn

 

From: Canberrabirds m("lists.canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds-bounces");"> <> on behalf of Geoffrey Dabb via Canberrabirds m("lists.canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds");"> <>
Date: Monday, 30 June 2025 at 9:42
am
To: Canberrabirds m("lists.canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds");"> <>
Subject: [Canberrabirds] FW: A colossal achievement: from the June newsletter of BirdLife International

The below might or might not simplify matters.  Some people prefer pictures.  These are slides from a talk on the subject to a COG meeting last year.  The issue of a unified taxonomic list is different from the issue of a unified English names list.  It is possible that English names, particularly the spelling of them (Black-Cockatoo v Black Cockatoo), will become more confused over the next few years.  I have not yet checked Avilist to see whether it reflects the differences listed in the last slide. 

 

 

From: Canberrabirds m("lists.canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds-bounces");"> <> On Behalf Of Michael Lenz via Canberrabirds
Sent: Sunday, 29 June 2025 8:49 PM
To: chatline m("lists.canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds");"> <>
Subject: [Canberrabirds] A colossal achievement: from the June newsletter of BirdLife International

 

A world-first for conservation: we’ve created a single, unified list of every bird species on earth.

After four years of dedicated, global collaboration, we’ve created what many have dreamt of; the world’s first single, unified list of all bird species. 

It’s called AviList and it unifies the world’s three most widely used checklists (IOC World Bird List, eBird's Clements Checklist, and the Handbook of the Birds of the World and BirdLife International Checklist) into a single agreed list.

 

 

Michael lenz



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