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National Woodland Re-survey Project
Funded by
DEFRA, Forestry Commission, Natural England,
RSPB, Woodland Trust and the BTO
Background
Many
of the specialist birds of our woodlands are in trouble. The government’s
Headline Indicator of Woodland Wildbird Populations has
fallen by 20% in 20 years and in a recent revision of Birds
of Conservation Concern several woodland species were added
to the lists due worrying declines in their populations. Marsh Tit,
Willow Tit and Lesser Spotted Woodpecker are now on the Red List
while Tree Pipit, Willow Warbler, Wood Warbler and Lesser Redpoll
have been added to the Amber List. The situation is potentially
every bit as serious as that which has occurred on farmland.
The data that these trends are derived from come primarily from
the BTO’s Common Birds Census. Whilst there have undoubtedly
been large declines in the species concerned within the sample plots
covered by the CBC, we cannot be sure that these declines will be
evident in all types of woodland and in all regions of the UK. The
volunteers who have contributed to the data collection select their
own plots, which means that the sites which contribute to the index
are not necessarily representative of woods across Britain. For
instance, woods of a certain size or type may be over-represented
in the sample, whilst the distribution of plots across the country
inevitably shows a strong bias to the south and east – areas
where most BTO members live.
The Aims
The BTO and RSPB have teamed up to carry out a National Woodland
Bird Re-survey Project which has two purposes. Firstly, it aims
to improve the estimates of changes in woodland bird populations.
For some species the current trends are based on observations of
very few territories and by increasing the sample sizes on which
the estimates are based we can be more sure about what’s happening
to their populations. Also, by improving the regional balance of
the data we can ensure that the overall figures are not unduly biased
to well-covered regions, and see whether trends differ between parts
of the country. Secondly, the project aims to make a preliminary
test of some of the many hypotheses explaining the observed trends.
Whereas with farmland birds there were obvious candidates to explain
the declines, as agricultural practices and landscapes had undergone
large changes in recent decades, the factors affecting woodland
birds seem to be more obscure. The variety of species affected suggests
that multiple factors may be at work. These include some intrinsic
to the woods themselves (such as changes in the habitat available
to birds due to changes in management, tree species composition,
age-structure and deer-browsing), landscape-level factors such as
woodland fragmentation and changes to surrounding farmland, and
wider-scale issues such as climate change, air pollution and changing
conditions on the wintering grounds of migrants. If at least some
of the possible mechanisms outlined above can be ruled out at this
early stage, then further research can be much more focussed.
The Project
Both the BTO and the RSPB have good quality datasets from the past
which can be used to meet these objectives, comprising surveys undertaken
in woods throughout the UK between the 1960s and 1980s. These sites
are being revisited to estimate what changes have taken place. The
BTO are returning to more than 150 old CBC plots covered during
the period from the late1960s to the1980s, using a combination of
trained professional fieldworkers and volunteers. These re-surveys
are somewhat less time-consuming than the original CBCs since we
will only be making four visits to each site in a season. This ensures
that we can cover a greater number of sites - the original survey
data will be re-analysed based on four visits to make sure the two
surveys are comparable.
Detailed measurements of habitat characteristics will be made to
look for associations between bird density and habitat and to see
whether changes in habitat availability could explain changes in
bird numbers. We will also assess deer impacts on vegetation (since
the numbers of deer themselves are difficult to estimate) and the
relative abundance of squirrels in the woods. Measures of squirrel
abundance can be determined through dray counts and even counts
of the animals themselves, if conducted at the right time of year.
Finally, we will take into consideration a variety of other features
associated with the woods we visit, such as the landscape context
(e.g. proximity to urban centres, proportions of surrounding farmland),
levels of recreational disturbance and factors related to woodland
management.
This project will help to confirm the extent to which the population
trends shown in the Headline Indicator of Woodland Wildbird
Populations apply to all regions and hopefully provide some
characterisation of the woods in which bird populations are most
adversely affected.

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