Site criteria list

For a site to be considered for IBA status, it must meet at least one of the following five criteria:

 

  1. Threatened and endangered species

 

Sites should consistently support significant breeding densities of one or more of the following federal or state listed species. Sites should not be imminently imperiled with destruction or major alteration, or be areas of infrequent or historical occurrence for the species.

 

 
Piping Plover Mountain Plover Interior Least Tern

 

  1. Species of significant concern

 

a) Sites should attract regularly occurring, significant breeding densities of any one of the following species. Special consideration will be made for sites with 3 or more species, or those with the highest known regularly occurring populations.

 

 

 
Eared Grebe
Wilson's Phalarope
Loggerhead Shrike
Western Grebe Forster's Tern Bell's Vireo
American Bittern Black Tern Pygmy Nuthatch
Least Bittern Black-billed Cuckoo Wood Thrush
Trumpeter Swan Yellow-billed Cuckoo Cerulean Warbler
Northern Harrier Burrowing Owl Prothonotary Warbler
Red-shouldered Hawk Short-eared Owl Kentucky Warbler
Swainson's Hawk Whip-poor-will Cassin's Sparrow
Ferruginous Hawk Lewis's Woodpecker Brewer's Sparrow
Greater Prairie-Chicken Red-headed Woodpecker Lark Bunting
Willet

Pileated Woodpecker

Grasshopper Sparrow
Upland Sandpiper Acadian Flycatcher Henslow's Sparrow
Long-billed Curlew Cordilleran Flycatcher Swamp Sparrow
McCown's Longspur Chestnut-collared Longspur Dickcissel
  Bobolink

 

b) Sites should contain a significant proportion of any of the following species' flyway population during spring or fall migration (non-breeding occurrences). Special consideration will be made for sites with 3 or more species, or those with the highest known regularly occurring populations. (Species listed in both 'a' and 'b' sections of Category 2 would be found in different habitats during breeding and migration seasons.)

 

 

 
Greater White-fronted Goose White-rumped Sandpiper
Sandhill Crane Baird's Sandpiper
Whooping Crane Stilt Sandpiper
American Golden-Plover Buff-breasted Sandpiper
Piping Plover Wilson's Phalarope
Long-billed Curlew Franklin's Gull
Hudsonian Godwit  


c) Sites attracting species of which knowledge of their life histories in Nebraska (breeding records, migration patterns, overall population trends) is limited and education/research is needed.

 

 
Clark's Grebe Sandhill Crane (breeding)
Hooded Merganser (breeding) Long-eared Owl
Mississippi Kite Sprague's Pipit
Yellow Rail Baird's Sparrow
Black Rail Smith's Longspur

 

  1. Birds that congregate in significant numbers

 

Sites should consistently attract high densities, high diversities, or both of one or more species in any of the following categories. Occurrences can be during breeding season, migration, or winter. Introduced or nuisance species—European starling, Canada goose (non-migratory), et al.—should not be included.

 

a) Aquatic habitats:

1) Waterfowl (loons, grebes, cormorants, geese, ducks, swans, and coots)

2) Shorebirds (plovers, sandpipers, snipe, woodcock, and phalaropes)

3) Waders (bitterns, herons, egrets, cranes, and ibises)

4) Gulls and terns

 

b) Terrestrial habitats: (for example, important migratory stopovers where geographical features concentrate large numbers of birds)

1) Raptors

2) Passerines

 

 

  1. Public education and research of birds

 

Sites that are natural areas where long-term avian research, monitoring projects, or both take place, or that contribute substantially to ornithology, bird conservation, and education.


  1. Rare or vulnerable habitat(s), or exceptional habitats

 

Sites that contain rare or vulnerable habitats within the state/region or an exceptional representative of a natural habitat (containing high species and natural habitat diversity), and that hold important species or species assemblages largely restricted to a distinctive habitat type.

 

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