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Farmland bird count appeal ahead of major initiative


By Hector MacKenzie

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Chaffinch
Chaffinch

WILDLIFE enthusiasts in Ross-shire are being teed up for a nationwide "citizen science" initiative aiming to reveal birds most in need of help.

The Big Farmland Bird Count returns for a seventh successive year with an appeal to farmers, land managers and gamekeepers to spend 30 minutes spotting species on their land between February 7 and 16.

The results aim to determine which farmland birds are benefiting from conservation efforts while identifying the ones most in need of help.

Organiser Dr Roger Draycott, head of advisory services, the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust (GWCT) said: "Farmers and gamekeepers are vital in helping to ensure the future survival of many of our most cherished farmland bird species like skylarks, yellowhammers, corn buntings and grey partridges.They are responsible for managing the largest songbird habitat in this country on their land but frequently their efforts to reverse bird declines are largely unrecorded. We believe the annual GWCT Big Farmland Bird Count will help remedy this.

"We understand the crucial role that land managers play in the survival of farmland birds and we want to give them an opportunity of showing what their conservation efforts deliver on the ground.

It is also a satisfying way to discover the different range of birds that are on the farm and the results can be surprising. We hope it will spur land managers on to do even more work for their farmland birds in the future and that it will act as a catalyst for them to start building their own long-standing wildlife records."

Last year, a record-breaking 1400 people took part in the count– a 40 per cent increase on the previous year, recording 140 species over 1 million acres. We are delighted that many landscape-scale farmland conservation projects are now taking part in the count and we are now able to feedback results at the landscape level as well as the individual farm level.

Encouragingly, a total of 30 red-listed species were recorded in 2019 in the UK count, with five appearing in the most-commonly seen species list including fieldfares, starlings, house sparrows, yellowhammers and song thrushes, with the first four seen by over 30 per cent of the farms taking part. In Scotland the most-commonly seen species in the 2019 count were blackbird, blue tit, chaffinch, pheasant and robin.

The BFBC was launched in 2014 to highlight the positive work done by land managers in helping to reverse the decline in farmland birds. The count offers a simple means of recording the effects of any conservation work currently being undertaken by farmers and gamekeepers on their land, such as supplementary feeding birds through winter or growing crops specifically to provide seed for birds.

At the end of the count, the results will be analysed by the Trust. All participants will receive a report on the national results once they have been collated.

Download the count sheet from the BFBC website www.bfbc.org.uk


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