Descrição
These data were collected by the Forest Department of Uganda under the ‘Natural Forest Management and Conservation Project’ (No. 6100.37.42.015) and the project of ‘Institutional Support for the Protection of East African Biodiversity’ (UNO/RAF/006/GEF). These data were collected from 1993 to1995 and published in a series of reports edited by Howard and Davenport (1996). The data have been mobilized by the staff of the A Rocha Uganda and A Rocha International under the project "Raising the profile of data for the conservation of four forested African landscapes" funded by GBIF's BID programme, and coordinated by A Rocha Kenya. The mobilised data consist of observation records of birds from Kisubi (formerly Ziika) forest reserve. The data are based on observation records collected between May,1993 and March,1995
Registros de Dados
Os dados deste recurso de checklist foram publicados como um Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), que é o formato padronizado para compartilhamento de dados de biodiversidade como um conjunto de uma ou mais tabelas de dados. A tabela de dados do núcleo contém 141 registros.
This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.
Versões
A tabela abaixo mostra apenas versões de recursos que são publicamente acessíveis.
Como citar
Pesquisadores deveriam citar esta obra da seguinte maneira:
Barahukwa A, Mbiro A, Tumwesigye A (2022): Checklist of Birds in Zika forest reserve, Uganda. v1.2. A Rocha Uganda. Dataset/Checklist. https://cloud.gbif.org/africa/resource?r=checklistofbirdsofziikaforestreserve&v=1.2
Direitos
Pesquisadores devem respeitar a seguinte declaração de direitos:
O editor e o detentor dos direitos deste trabalho é A Rocha Uganda. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.
GBIF Registration
Este recurso foi registrado no GBIF e atribuído ao seguinte GBIF UUID: 4dc65c88-ab7c-4c1d-8331-5c25770e2eb6. A Rocha Uganda publica este recurso, e está registrado no GBIF como um publicador de dados aprovado por GBIF Uganda.
Palavras-chave
Checklist; Mist netting; Uganda; birds; forest reserves; Derivedfromoccurrence
Contatos
- Provedor Dos Metadados ●
- Originador ●
- Ponto De Contato
- Research Officer
- Gayaza-Kyetume, Kayunga Road P.O. Box 11569, Kampala, Uganda
- +256414663875
- Originador ●
- Ponto De Contato
- Research and conservation Officer
- Gayaza-Kyetume, Kayunga Road P.O. Box 11569, Kampala, Uganda
- +256783282622
- Originador
- Community Based Projects Coordinator
- Gayaza-Kyetume, Kayunga Road P.O. Box 11569, Kampala, Uganda
- +256772579359
- Ponto De Contato
- Researcher
- P.O. Box 24994, Karen 00502, Nairobi, Kenya
- Ponto De Contato
- Researcher
- Ponto De Contato
- Researcher
- 27-29 Cursitor St, Holborn, London EC4A 1LT UK
- Ponto De Contato
- Director of Science and Conservation
- A Rocha International 180 Piccadilly London W1J 9HF UK
- +447935874171
- Usuário
- Data collector
Cobertura Geográfica
The data were collected from Kisubi forest reserve
Coordenadas delimitadoras | Sul Oeste [-90, -180], Norte Leste [90, 180] |
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Cobertura Taxonômica
A total of 141 bird (Aves) species were recorded and identified to species level
Espécie | Lagonosticta rubricata (Lichtenstein, 1823) (African Firefinch), Accipiter tachiro (Daudin, 1800) (African Goshawk) |
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Cobertura Temporal
Data Inicial / Data final | 1993-05-01 / 1995-03-30 |
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Dados Sobre o Projeto
A Rocha Uganda is part of the eleven organisations that came together to mobilise, share and use biodiversity data across four African countries to help with the conservation of four forested African landscapes. These landscapes cover over 450,000 hectares of tropical forests in four countries where the A Rocha family is undertaking conservation work. The project includes five of the organisations belonging to the A Rocha family (i.e., A Rocha Uganda, A Rocha International, A Rocha Kenya, Eden Care Initiative-Nigeria, and A Rocha Ghana) as partners. Other partner organisations include; National Museum of Kenya, African Butterfly Research Institute (ABRI), Kenya Wildlife Service, National Forest Authority in Uganda, Council for Scientific Industrial Research- Food Research Institute in Ghana and A.P Leventis Ornithological Research Institute in Nigeria. With funding from JRS Biodiversity Foundation and European Union (https://european-union.europa.eu/) through the Biodiversity Information for Development (BID) program of GBIF, a regional project “Raising the profile of data for the conservation of four forested African landscapes” was initiated and its seeking to utilise biodiversity data to better conserve biodiversity-rich but threatened forests of Atewa in Ghana; key coastal forests of Kenya (Dakatcha, Taita Hills, Shimba Hills and Kaya Forests); Kwande and Oban-liku in Nigeria and Eastern Uganda key forests (West Bugwe and Igwe-Luvunya, South Busoga, Bukaleba, Mabira, Mukono, Mpanga, Mpigi and Zika Forest Reserves). The dataset “The checklist of birds in zika forest” reports data collected under a programme of Uganda Forest Department’s Natural Forest Conservation Section to undertake biodiversity surveys in 65 of Uganda’s forests.
Título | Raising the profile of data for the conservation of four forested African landscapes |
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Identificador | BID-AF2020-140-REG |
Financiamento | Publication of this dataset in GBIF was made possible through the BID programme of GBIF with co-funding from the JRS Biodiversity Foundation. The original fieldwork was supported by grants from the EC (“Natural Forest Management and Conservation Project” 6100.37.42.015) and from UNDP/FAO through the GEF (“Institutional Support for the Protection of East African Biodiversity” UNO/RAF/006/GEF) |
Descrição da Área de Estudo | Zika forest is one of the smallest forest reserves in Uganda and covers an area of about 25 hectares (62 acres) next to the swamps of Waiya Bay, an inlet of Lake Victoria. |
Descrição do Design | The sampling methodology used for data collection was observation. Observations were made using 8 x 30 and 10 x 40 binoculars. Effort was made to visit as many habitats as possible with maximum coverage occurring in the early morning and towards evening. |
O pessoal envolvido no projeto:
- Provedor Dos Metadados
Métodos de Amostragem
The sampling methodology used for data collection was observation. Observations were made using 8 x 30 and 10 x 40 binoculars. Effort was made to visit as many habitats as possible with maximum coverage occurring in the early morning and towards evening.
Área de Estudo | These data are a checklist of birds recorded from Zika forest reserve. |
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Controle de Qualidade | Wherever possible, identification was carried out in the field. Birds were identified using Williams and Arlott (1980), Mackworth-Praed and Grant (1957, 1960), Guggisburg (1986), Sinclair et al. (1993), and Brown et al. (1982), Urban et al. (1986), Fry et al. (1988) and Keith et al. (1992). The order and nomenclature used in the original survey reports followed Britton (1980), Carswell and Pomeroy (1984) with revisions made by the Ornithological Sub-Committee of the East Africa Natural History Society (D. Turner, pers. comm.). The order, taxonomy and nomenclature were subsequently revised according to the HBW and BirdLife International checklist taxonomy (del Hoyo and Collar 2014, 2016). According to the original survey reports: “Ranger ornithologists were trained to make detailed field descriptions of their observations, including notes on the appearance, calls and behaviour of birds and the habitats in which they were observed. Each ranger was provided with a shortlist of (generally common, unmistakable) species that did not require verification, but records of any other species were only accepted... on submission of one (or preferably two) voucher specimens of each species... During the programme, a comprehensive reference collection was made at Forest Department headquarters. Any difficult specimens were taken to the National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, or the Zoological Museum at Tring, UK for identification.” The geographic coordinates of sampling locations were recorded during the original fieldwork using the Military Grid Reference System (old version). These were converted to a standard UTM format and then to decimal latitude and longitude using GIS based tools. |
Descrição dos passos do método:
- The national survey of Uganda forests collected data in 65 forests. The original field survey results including all data were published in a series of reports by the Forest Department of Uganda (Howard et al. 1996). The current dataset comprises records of birds that were observed during this survey. We selected a sample of forests that had been surveyed in the Central and Eastern Regions of Uganda in order to digitise the data for GBIF. Electronic copies of the written reports and a separate electronic database of records were made available for this purpose by the original authors of the reports (Peter Howard). We extracted the bird mist netting records from the electronic database and supplemented these with location data provided in the narrative reports. The species names were updated to modern taxonomy by aligning the names and regionally appropriate forms (subspecies) with the HBW and BirdLife International checklist taxonomy (del Hoyo and Collar 2014, 2016) paying particular attention to potential taxonomic splits and lumps that had occurred since the original data were collected. The location data in the original reports were provided in Military Grid Reference System. These were first converted to standard UTM coordinates, noting that the MGRS was using an old datum (MGRS-AL scheme also called "MGRS old"). UTM coordinates were then converted to decimal degrees using an online conversion spreadsheet (https://giscrack.com/download-excel-template-convert-geographic-coordinates-utm/). The converted locations were then checked against Google Maps imagery to confirm that a satisfactory conversion had been made. Species records from each Forest Reserve were checked against the distribution maps in Carswell et al. (2005) and through expert assessment (J. Lindsell) to ensure that no unsubstantiated or extralimital records were included.
Citações bibliográficas
- Davenport, T., Howard, P., & Dickinson, C. (Eds.). (1996). Mpanga, Zika and Mpigi District Forest Reserve: Biodiversity Report no. 24. Forest Department, Kampala.
- Howard, P. C. andDavenport, T. R. B. (1996). Forest Biodiversity Reports, vols. 1–33. Uganda Forest Department, Kampala, Uganda.
- Britton, P.L. (Ed.) (1980). Birds of East Africa. East Africa Natural History Society, Nairobi.
- Brown, L.H., Urban, E. and Newman, K. (1982). The Birds of Africa. Vol. 1. Academic Press, London.
- Carswell, M. and Pomeroy, D. (1984). Check-list of the birds of Uganda. Ornithological Sub-Committee of the East Africa Natural History Society.
- Carswell, M., Pomeroy, D., Reynolds, J. and Tushabe, H. (2005) The Bird Atlas of Uganda. BOU, Oxford
- del Hoyo, J. and Collar, N.J. (2014). HBW and BirdLife International Illustrated Checklist of the Birds of the World Volume 1: Non-passerines Lynx Edicions, Barcelona.
- del Hoyo, J. and Collar, N.J. (2016). HBW and BirdLife International Illustrated Checklist of the Birds of the World Volume 2: Passerines Lynx Edicions, Barcelona
- Fry, C.H., Keith, S. and Urban, E.K. (1988). The Birds of Africa. Vol. 3. Academic Press, London
- Guggisberg, C.A.W. (1986). Birds of East Africa. Volume 2. 2nd ed. Sapra Safari Guide No.6. Mount Kenya Sundries Ltd., Nairobi.
- Keith, S., Urban, E.K.and Fry, C.H. (1992). The Birds of Africa. Vol. 4. London, Academic Press.
Metadados Adicionais
Identificadores alternativos | https://cloud.gbif.org/africa/resource?r=checklistofbirdsofziikaforestreserve |
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