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East Asian–Australasian Flyway PartnershipThe Partnership for the East Asian–Australasian Flyway maintains an informal voluntary network of sites that are recognised as internationally important for waterbirds that migrate along the East Asian–Australian Flyway. Quick facts
Flyway site networkThe criteria In Australia, wetlands are nominated to the Network with the consent of the wetland owner/manager and endorsement of the State Government. The Federal Government submits the nomination to the Partnership Secretariat. At both national level and in Queensland, there are no legally binding implications for sites designated in the Flyway Site Network. In terms of management, owners/managers are not required to alter their existing land-use or provide any formal plans. They are encouraged to protect the migratory waterbirds for which the site was listed, and their habitats, through voluntarily applying wise use principles Most of Australia’s migratory waterbirds are shorebirds and in Queensland all of the Flyway Network Sites have been designated on the basis of numbers of migratory shorebirds at the site. Flyway sites in QueenslandOut of the eight Flyway Sites in Queensland, five of these are Ramsar listed wetlands and/or are listed as Queensland Government protected areas - Moreton Bay, Great Sandy Strait, Bowling Green Bay, Shoalwater Bay and Currawinya National Park. Three sites added to the Flyway Site Network in the South-East Gulf of Carpentaria are not Ramsar listed or on Queensland Government managed protected areas. These nominations were put forward by the Carpentaria Land Council Aboriginal Corporation South-East Gulf of Carpentaria sitesA site near Karumba (Delta Downs The Nijinda Durlga (Tarrant) Gore Point at Werndinga Flyway site Photo by Roger Jaensch and Carpentaria Land Council Aboriginal Corporation The Leichhardt River to Gore Point (Wernadinga Coast) site Additional informationLast updated: 21 June 2022 This page should be cited as: Department of Environment, Science and Innovation, Queensland (2022) East Asian–Australasian Flyway Partnership, WetlandInfo website, accessed 16 April 2025. Available at: https://wetlandinfo.des.qld.gov.au/wetlands/management/bird-management/bird-legislation/eaa-flyway.html |