Biodiversity

Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS)

 

page of a book

New distributor for ABRS publications

As of Friday, 28 November 2008 ABRS publications will no longer be available through ABRS. We are currently negotiating with a new distributor and once awarded, contact details will be advertised here.

Any book orders received after the 28 November by ABRS, will not be processed by ABRS. Once contact details are advertised, you will need to submit your order through the new distributor’s website.

We expect that the new distributor will commence sales of ABRS publications shortly and we apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

National Taxonomy Forum

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About ABRS

The ABRS is a Programme within Parks Australia Division of the Department of the Environment and Water Resources.

ABRS strives to answer three questions:

Aim and objectives

The Aim of ABRS is to provide, through strategic partnerships, the underlying taxonomic knowledge necessary for the conservation and sustainable use of Australia’s biodiversity.

The Objectives are to:

ABRS activities

ABRS achieves its aim and objectives by providing:

ABRS also participates in International Activities. Regular information about ABRS activities is published in the newsletter Biologue. For an overview of ABRS activities, see the ABRS Strategic Plan.

History of ABRS

Australia has a rich and intriguing biota. This natural heritage is a treasure for all Australians, as our plants and animals form the living fabric of the landscapes in which we live. Approximately 80% of Australia's terrestrial and aquatic flora and fauna occur nowhere else in the world, placing a heavy responsibility on Australia under the terms of the Convention on Biological Diversity.

Until 1973, information on our plants and animals lay scattered throughout the many libraries, museums and herbaria in Australia and overseas. In that year the Australian Government established ABRS to coordinate research in taxonomy, the science which identifies, describes, classifies, and records the distribution of, our flora and fauna.

The decision to establish ABRS was generally in accordance with recommendations from the Australian Academy of Science during the 1960s and consistent with the 1972 report of the House of Representatives Select Committee on Wildlife Conservation:

That a biological survey be established by the Australian Government to undertake on a continuing basis, surveys of birds, mammals and reptiles and their ecology and to establish a national collection of wildlife species.

Since its inception, ABRS has taken active responsibility for funding taxonomic research on Australia's biodiversity, and is a world leader with its internationally recognised series of publications and databases.

International activities

The ABRS contributes to and participates in international forums and projects including the Global Taxonomy Initiative, and the Global Biodiversity Information Facility.

ABRS also publishes a number of international publications including the series Species Plantarum, and one-off publications like the Darwin Declaration, and the Global Taxonomy Initiative: Shortening the Distance between Discovery and Delivery.

ABRS provides a grant-in-aid to assist with the annual appointment at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, UK, of the Australian Botanical Liaison Officer.