change Jersey | Forum

Topic location: Forum home » General » General Chat
Deleted user Apr 11 '17, 11:53PM
More than a quarter of UK birds, including the puffin, nightingale and curlew, require urgent conservation efforts to ensure their survival, Authentic Andrelton Simmons Youth Jerseyaccording to a new report on the state of the UK’s birds. Since the last review in 2009, an additional 15 species of bird have been placed on the “red list”, a category that indicates a species is in danger of extinction or that has experienced significant decline in population or habitat in recent years. http://www.officialangelsproshop.com/Andrelton_Simmons_Jersey The total number of species on the red list is now 67 out of a total of 247. On top of this, eight species are considered at risk of global extinction: the balearic shearwater, aquatic warbler, common pochard, long-tailed duck, velvet scoter, slavonian grebe, puffin and turtle dove. The stories you need to read, in one handy email Read more “We’ve been putting these reports out since 1999 – I think it is one of the worst we’ve seen,” said David Noble, one of the authors of the State of the UK’s Birds study and principal ecologist for monitoring at the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO). Noble said a variety of factors led to the classification of an increased number of species in danger, Joe Theismann Youth Jersey including land use change, such as afforestation and drainage of fields for farmland, and increased numbers of predators, such as foxes. He also pointed to the global impacts of climate change, which affect migratory birds. The report is produced by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), the BTO and the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, in partnership with the UK’s statutory nature conservation bodies. It collates material from other studies and bird surveys to give a thorough report on the status of various avian species. There is particular concern among conservationists for the curlew, Europe’s largest wader, which has seen a population decline of 64% from 1970 to 2014 in the UK, largely due to habitat loss. The UK supports up to 27% of the global curlew population, http://www.footballredskinsprostore.com/Joe_Theismann_Jersey_Cheap and due to its “near threatened” global status, a research plan has been created to help understand the causes of the species’ decline. “Curlews are instantly recognisable on winter estuaries or summer moors by their striking long, curved beak, long legs and evocative call,” said Dr Daniel Hayhow, conservation scientist at the RSPB. “They are one of our most charismatic birds and also one of our most important.”http://www.thatforumplace.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=41359&p=324783#p324783http://mcspartners.ning.com/forum/topics/galician-jersey