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Birds of the World Discovery Webinar | The Cornell Lab of Ornithology | https://birdsoftheworld.org Birds of the World is the world’s leading scholarly ornithological platform featuring bird life histories and data resources for every bird in the world. This global ornithological resource drives scientific research, education and biodiversity conservation around the world. Subscribe with code WEBINAR to save 20% your first term. Description: The Search for Lost Birds was founded in 2021 with the goal of supporting efforts to search for and update the conservation status of birds with no recent documented observations. There have been a number of exciting rediscoveries of these ‘lost’ species in the past four years with birds like the New Britain Goshawk, Black-naped Pheasant-pigeon, White-tailed Tityra, and Black-lored Waxbill all recorded for the first time in decades. But there are still more than a hundred species on the Lost Birds list waiting to be found or, in some cases, proven extinct. In this seminar, John Mittermeier and Alex Berryman review the past four years of Lost Birds – how many species have been rediscovered in total? Which were the most surprising? How many lost birds have become extinct? – and explore the prospects for finding the remaining lost species. John C. Mittermeier works as the director of the Search for Lost Birds at American Bird Conservancy. He manages the global list of lost bird species and supports projects to search for lost birds around the world. John got his PhD at the University of Oxford and has done field research on lost species in Samoa, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Madagascar, among other wild places. Alex Berryman is the Senior Red List Officer for BirdLife International and leads the organisation’s IUCN Red List assessments for Asia . He is also a scientific Associate for Natural History Museum UK. ALex is the BirdLife lead for Search for Lost Birds. He has published extensively on avian taxonomy and conservation, and sits on the BirdLife Taxonomic Working Group and is a member of the IUCN SSC Asian Songbird Trade Specialist Group. Alex has a particular interest in the world’s poorly known birds - which perhaps leads him to all this interesting work. #bird #ornithology #science #birdsoftheworld #lostbirds #birding #checklists https://searchforlostbirds.org/