Yorkshire Post

A quarter of UK’s birds under threat

Haunting call of curlew across Yorkshire countrysid­e threatened as numbers fall 64 per cent since 1970

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT n Email: alex.wood@ypn.co.uk n Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

More than a quarter of the UK’s birds are struggling to survive, with species including curlews and puffins joining the at-risk list in recent years, a report highlights.

Europe’s largest and most distinctiv­e wading bird, the curlew is among those that have been added to the “red list” of threatened UK birds.

MORE THAN a quarter of the UK’s birds are struggling to survive, with species including curlews and puffins joining the atrisk list in recent years, a report highlights.

Europe’s largest and most distinctiv­e wading bird, the curlew is among those that have been added to the “red list” of threatened UK birds in its most recent update, with numbers falling 64 per cent from 1970 to 2014.

The UK is home to a quarter of the global breeding population of curlews, which is known for its haunting calls on Yorkshire’s moors and estuaries. But numbers have tumbled in this country in recent decades due to habitat loss, the State of the UK’s Birds 2016 report said, and its onceresili­ent population is now being hit by predators.

With the species considered to be “near-threatened” globally, an internatio­nal single species action plan has been created, with research being carried out in its uplands breeding grounds to find practical measures to help the bird.

A study is being carried in Geltsdale, Cumbria and the Peak District to test the combinatio­n of controllin­g predators like foxes and crows, as well as ensuring the birds have the rough, damp, vegetation they favour for nesting to stabilise numbers.

If it proves successful it could be rolled out in other key areas – including Nidderdale and the Yorkshire Dales.

Yorkshire has seen a 33 per cent decline since the mid 1990s.

Sarah Sanders, RSPB Curlew Recovery Programme Manager, said predator control was a “last resort option.”

She said: “Places like Yorkshire, where there is still a fairly large core population, are really important in terms of maintainin­g the population. If we are going to have any impact it will require working across vast landscapes with farmers and landowners – it is not something the RSPB can do on its own.”

She said predator control “is the last resort option – at the moment we are in a position where we have a globally threatened species which could potentiall­y disappear.

“We have a global responsibi­lity to do something about it because we are the third most important country in the world for breeding curlew.”

Puffins, nightingal­es, pied flycatcher­s and merlins are among other the species that have joined the list of those most in need of conservati­on action in recent years, bringing the total on the red list to 67.

The listing of Atlantic puffins as being in need of conservati­on action comes after they were classed as vulnerable to extinction globally, in the face of worryingly high breeding failures at key colonies in recent years.

But the State of the UK’s Birds report also points to good news for some species, with recent surveys showing an increase of 15 per cent in golden eagle numbers in Britain and a boost to rare cirl buntings a sparrow-sized bird found in South-West England, which now have more than 1,000 breeding pairs.

The report comes from the RSPB, British Trust for Ornitholog­y (BTO) and Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT), together with government conservati­on agencies across the UK.

 ??  ?? TOP VIEWS: The view from the summit of Snowdon, named the UK’s best sight; Three Sisters mountain range in Glencoe Valley, Scotland, which came second in a Samsung survey; our third favourite view, Stonehenge.
TOP VIEWS: The view from the summit of Snowdon, named the UK’s best sight; Three Sisters mountain range in Glencoe Valley, Scotland, which came second in a Samsung survey; our third favourite view, Stonehenge.
 ??  ?? BATTLE TO SURVIVE: A study into curlew habitats has been launched after a marked decline in numbers put it on the so-called red list.
BATTLE TO SURVIVE: A study into curlew habitats has been launched after a marked decline in numbers put it on the so-called red list.

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