Loughborough Echo

Bird population is in freefall

WILDLIFE EXPERTS WARN 70 SPECIES ARE NOW ON ENDANGERED RED LIST

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MORE than a quarter of UK bird species are under serious threat, with familiar species such as swifts and greenfinch­es joining those most at risk, experts have warned.

Some 70 of the UK’s 245 assessed birds are “red-listed” – meaning they are of highest conservati­on concern because of severe declines, numbers well below historical levels or the risk of global extinction, a new assessment shows.

The latest update to the UK red list for birds, carried out by a coalition of the UK’s leading bird conservati­on organisati­ons, is longer than it has ever been, with the figure nearly double what it was in the first assessment in 1996.

The survey looks at 245 species regularly occurring in the UK, Channel Islands and Isle of Man and categorise­s them as red, amber or greenliste­d depending on how threatened they are considered to be.

Newly red-listed species include swifts, house martins, the ptarmigan, purple sandpiper, Montagu’s harrier and greenfinch, the report by groups including the British Trust for Ornitholog­y, RSPB, Wildlife Trusts and National Trust warns.

Overall, the red list has grown by three species since the last assessment in 2015, with 11 more birds red-listed, but six moved to amber and two no longer assessed.

Farmland and upland birds have seen no improvemen­t in their “worrying plight”, with more red-listed in the latest assessment,.

Swifts have moved from the amber list to red in the face of a 58% drop in their population­s since 1995 and house martins join them due to a 57% fall since 1969, joining other birds which migrate to sub-Saharan Africa such as cuckoos and nightingal­es.

Greenfinch­es have gone from greenliste­d to the red list following a 62% population crash since 1993 due to a severe outbreak of the disease trichomono­sis.

The disease is spread by contaminat­ed food and drinking water, and the conservati­on groups urged homeowners to clean bird feeders regularly and temporaril­y stop putting out food if sick birds are seen in order to slow the spread.

The experts also raised concerns over wildfowl and wader population­s which spend the winter in the UK, such as Bewick’s swans, the goldeneye

and dunlin, which have joined the red list, with pressures including illegal hunting abroad, ingesting lead ammunition and climate change.

Leach’s storm-petrel and kittiwakes are among the birds on the red list threatened with global extinction.

In better news, successful reintroduc­tion projects have helped the white-tailed eagles – which became extinct in the UK as breeding birds

more than a century ago – move off the red list onto the amber listing.

The song thrush, pied flycatcher and grey wagtail have been moved from red to amber,.

Colonisati­on of the UK by new birds – much of it down to human-induced climate change – has seen five new species including the great white egret, cattle egret and black-winged stilt added to the latest review.

RSPB chief executive Beccy Speight warned that the assessment was “more evidence that the UK’s wildlife is in freefall and not enough is being done to reverse declines”.

She warned: “As with our climate, this really is the last chance saloon to halt and reverse the destructio­n of nature.

“We often know what action we need to take to change the situation, but we need to do much more, rapidly and at scale.”

The Game and Wildlife Conservati­on Trust’s director of research, Dr Andrew Hoodless, said more farmland and upland birds were added to the red list.

“We need to better understand the effects of climate change on some species, as well as the impacts of changing habitats and food availabili­ty along migration routes and in wintering areas of sub-Saharan African migrants,” he said.

“For many red-listed species, however, improving breeding success in the UK is vital.

“We can and must make real and immediate improvemen­ts to this through better engagement with UK farmers, land managers and gamekeeper­s in order to encourage adoption of effective packages of conservati­on measures.”

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