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BirdTrack update - Christmas
2008
Merry Christmas to all our BirdTrack recorders, and
many thanks for your continued support during 2008.
With 2009 just round the corner, what better New Year
resolution than to make sure all your bird records are
fed into BirdTrack?! Taking them out of your notebook
and making them work for conservation couldn't be simpler!
We seem to have had a rush of records of non-native
birds over the last week. BirdTrack is one of the few
schemes nationally to keep tabs on many of these species,
so always send these sightings in. Recent records included
Bar-headed Geese (London and Herts), Ruddy Shelduck
(Anglesey), White-cheeked Pintail (Kent), Black Swan
(Cheshire, Lincs and nine in Devon), Helmeted Guineafowl
(Hants), Red-crested Pochard (at various sites, including
27at one London site), Mandarin Duck (54 at one Staffs
site) and feral Barnacle Geese (Beds).
Also of note were some large winter gatherings of waterfowl,
with counts coming in of 26 Black-throated Diver (Cornwall),
152 Great Crested Grebe (Hants), 1,500 Bewick's Swan
(WWT Welney, Norfolk) and 605 Black-tailed Godwit (Hants).
Equally impressive though is the winter gathering of
corvids (crows) at Buckenham, Norfolk, and one recorder
recently estimated the numbers at 10,000 Rook, 8,000
Carrion Crow and 2,000 Jackdaw!
Bird Atlas 2007-11
The second winter of fieldwork for Bird Atlas 2007-11
is going really well now. Records submitted to BirdTrack
are an integral part of the Atlas process, and more
information on why we need a new Atlas, and how you
can help can be found here.
To find out more about the relationship between BirdTrack
and Atlas 2007-11, click here.
You can really see how your BirdTrack
records count, and the maps below show the winter distribution
of Buzzard in the last winter Atlas in 1981-84 (left)
and BirdTrack records submitted during the first winter's
fieldwork from November to February (right).
 
Anyone already registered for BirdTrack
can easily set themselves up to take on Atlas fieldwork
by following the Bird Atlas link from Survey
Home. Don't forget though that all of the sightings
you enter into BirdTrack will also be available for
the Atlas, so there's no need to enter things twice.
If you have any queries about the Atlas, then don't
hesitate to get in touch with us.
Your records
working for conservation
For more information on how your BirdTrack
records are being used directly for conservation, check
out the Bird
Conservation Targeting Project. Project maps for
farmland species can also be found on the main site
here
(and click on Agri-environment Targeting).
View all the archived
BirdTrack news here.
To contact the BirdTrack Organiser
email:
Mark Grantham
BirdTrack Organiser |