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~ a celebration of nature

earthstar

Tag Archives: red-listed birds

Pochard, red-listed

02 Saturday Mar 2024

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aythya ferina, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cosmeston Lakes Country Park, Pochard, red-listed birds

Even in the short time I’ve lived in Wales, the numbers of Pochard (Aythya ferina) I see each winter have declined, and my observations are confirmed by the facts: Pochards are now red-listed in the UK. According to information in the British Trust for Ornithology’s publication Into the Red, both the breeding and non-breeding populations of these birds have declined as have the ranges both breeding and non-breeding birds occupy, and they are classified as globally threatened by the IUCN (the International Union for Conservation of Nature).

240302 pochard male

So, it’s always a great pleasure when I do see Pochards on the local lakes and waterways. This male, with his fiery russet head, and female, with the mottled brown plumage that is so typical of female ducks, have been present at Cosmeston Lakes Country Lake this past week.

240302 pochard female

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The voice of wildness

21 Tuesday Feb 2023

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Curlew, red-listed birds

‘The shape and voice of wildness’ – that is one of David Gray’s many evocative descriptions of the Curlew in his piece for the BTO’s publication Into the Red. ‘Mottled mud spirit’, ‘dressed understatedly in streaked browns and greys’ are two more but, as you would expect from a well-known singer-songwriter, Gray’s most basic response is to this mystical bird’s voice: ‘To hear a Curlew’s song as it carries across the land, is to hear, quite literally, a place being sung into being’. I sincerely hope you and your children and grandchildren get to experience that singing.

230221 curlew

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Red-backed shrike

18 Tuesday Oct 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

autumn migration, bird migration, birding, birdwatching, British birds, butcher bird, Lanius collurio, Red-backed shrike, red-listed birds

Shrikes are known as butcher birds, perhaps because of their powerful hooked beaks, more likely because of their tendency to create larders by impaling excess prey on spikes in trees and bushes. I have previously seen a distant Great grey shrike but last Sunday I had the opportunity to watch my very first Red-backed shrike at fairly close quarters, and what a stunning bird it is!

221018 red-backed shrike (a)

The Red-backed shrike (Lanius collurio) was once a reasonably common bird in southern England but, like so many British birds that have suffered from habitat decline, it is now classified as red-listed. And, though it’s thought one or two pairs still breed in England each year, these birds are mostly seen on passage, migrating to their northern breeding grounds in May-June, then heading to their over-wintering grounds in southern Africa between August and October.

221018 red-backed shrike (b)

When I was reading up about these birds, I discovered a 2018 article on the Bird Guides website, reporting on the altitudes reached by migrating birds, which noted that, from Sweden (one of the countries where these birds breed), the Red-backed shrike ‘flies at up to 3,650 metres. Both individuals [the other bird was the Great reed warbler] flew the highest above ground across the Mediterranean Sea and the Sahara, but the shrike also reached high flight altitudes closer to its winter grounds in southern Africa.’ It seems incredible to me that the small bird I saw sitting in a tree amongst the sand dunes at Kenfig National Nature Reserve would soon be flying up to 3 kilometres high in the sky over southern Africa!

221018 red-backed shrike (c)

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Exciting news

24 Saturday Sep 2022

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

bird conservation, birding, British birds, Into the Red, red-listed birds, supporting Britain's red-listed birds

I’m finally able to share some exciting news with you all. Back in June I was utterly astonished and hugely delighted to be invited by the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) to contribute to their forthcoming publication Into the Red, ‘a collection of words and art inspired by Britain’s most vulnerable birds’. The book focuses on Britain’s red-listed birds, each one the subject of an original artwork and a piece of writing, prose or poetry, by 70 artists and 70 writers, some well-known, some not (like me). Profits from the sale of the book will be used to help these birds, to support the work being done to conserve and restore ailing bird populations.

220924 Into the Red

The official publication date is 4 October but you can see examples of the book’s interior pages right now, and pre-order your copies, by clicking on this link to the BTO website. I know times are tough for many people at the moment but, if you can, I urge you to buy the book so that, together, we can try to bring these vulnerable birds back from the edge of extinction. My sincere thanks!

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D is for Dunlin

09 Thursday Dec 2021

Posted by sconzani in birds

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Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff Bay birding, Dunlin, red-listed birds

Seeing this Dunlin was a delightful surprise back in May (a fellow birder had spotted it and put the word out), as these shorebirds rarely stop over in Cardiff Bay. Sadly, the chances of seeing Dunlins at all have declined dramatically in recent years, as their population has plummeted, and, according to British Birds recently published report of ‘The status of our bird populations’, these birds have recently been added to the IUCN Red List, meaning they are now at extreme risk of extinction in Britain.

211209 dunlin

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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