The United Nations ESCAP East and North-East Asia (ENEA) Office, serving as the Secretariat of the North-East Asian Subregional Programme for Environmental Cooperation (NEASPEC), has worked with ENEA member States and stakeholders to promote subregional environmental cooperation on air pollution, biodiversity and nature conservation, marine protected areas, low carbon cities, and desertification and land degradation. Under the framework of NEASPEC, the subregional Nature Conservation Strategy for target species was endorsed at the 12th Senior Officials Meeting (SOM-12) in 2007 to achieve three main goals: 1) contribute to biodiversity conservation in the North-East Asia subregion by ensuring the survival of target species; 2) promote transboundary and intergovernmental cooperation for nature conservation among NEASPEC member States; and 3) enhance coordinated efforts to conserve target species and their habitats. In line with this strategy, the Office initiated the project on “Connectivity Conservation for Habitats of Flagship Migratory Birds in North-East Asia” in May 2024, building upon previous recommendations. The project focuses on three flagship migratory bird species (Black-faced Spoonbills, Hooded Cranes, and White-naped Cranes) and their habitats, fostering transboundary cooperation and enhancing the capacity of member States to monitor, assess, and manage conservation efforts. To support this activity, the Office is seeking one senior consultant to conduct analytical studies on the interlinkages between agricultural practices, agrobiodiversity, and migratory bird conservation in the North-East Asian subregion. The study will examine how land-use changes, agricultural intensification, and associated factors such as pesticide use, water and soil management, and crop selection influence migratory bird populations and their habitats. The consultant will also identify best practices and policy options that promote bird-friendly, biodiversity-supportive agricultural systems, based on evidence and case studies from within and beyond the subregion. These findings will help scale up and accelerate transboundary cooperation on integrating agrobiodiversity conservation into sustainable agricultural policy and practice.