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Robins counting on Christmas cheer
This year Robins
and other garden birds could be in trouble over the festive period.
While we overdo it on mince pies and turkey, our garden birds may
well be struggling to find food. A poor autumn for seeds, and with
berries disappearing fast, many birds will be looking to us to make
up the shortfall.
This autumn has been
particularly poor for acorns and beech mast, which has meant that
birds like Woodpigeon, Coal Tit and Chaffinch have lost one of their
major winter food sources. As a consequence some of these birds
have started to feed on berries much earlier than normal, with others
visiting garden feeding stations in greater numbers to take seed
and other foods.
Berries represent an
important resource for many of our familiar garden birds, including
the unofficial emblem of Christmas – the Robin, and this year
there is going to be plenty of competition for limited supplies.
This means that any help homeowners can give to small birds could
make a real difference.
“The poor
seed crop this year has seen berries being depleted much earlier
than normal. What this means for our garden birds is that a food
source which would normally last them through the winter months
has now pretty much been exhausted” says Mike Toms, the
BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch organiser.
It is clear that Robins
and other garden birds are going to need extra food from garden
owners to help them make it through this critical period but it
is important that we put the right type of food out too.
“Some foods
are unsuitable for birds with things such as bacon-rind and desiccated
coconut actually being harmful. Don’t put out the turkey carcass
and leave it there to be picked on as it will soon go off and become
a health hazard to birds. There are great energy-rich seed mixes
available at supermarkets and garden centres, get these and give
your garden birds a fighting chance this winter” Mike
adds.
Robins are going to
need our help this winter, so put out food and go that extra step
and join the BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch survey. The records you provide
will ensure that we know how the populations of our familiar garden
birds are faring, which is especially important during the winter
months.
It has been running
since 1995 and has highlighted changes in the use of the nation’s
gardens by different bird species. Some 16,500 participants currently
take part in Garden BirdWatch and send in simple weekly records
of the bird species using their gardens. These records show that
95% of Garden BirdWatchers record Robins using their gardens each
week. To receive a free information pack, phone on 01842 750050
or write to GBW, Room 50, British Trust for Ornithology, The Nunnery,
Thetford, Norfolk IP24 2PU.
Notes for editors
1) The BTO/CJ Garden
BirdWatch. The BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch is the only nationwide survey
of garden birds to run weekly throughout the year, providing important
information on how birds use gardens, and how this use changes over
time. Currently, some 16,500 people take part in the project across
the British isles. The BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch is funded by participants’
contributions and supported by CJ WildBird Foods Ltd and is the
largest year round survey of garden birds anywhere in the world.
For more information see www.bto.org/gbw
2) CJ WildBird Foods.
CJ WildBird Foods is Europe’s leading supplier of bird food
and bird feeding products. CJ WildBird Foods has been responsible
for a number of significant developments within the bird food and
feeding industry, including the introduction of black sunflower
seeds to the UK as a major new bird food and the development of
specialist seed mixes for use in tubular feeders. The company has
also been supporting research into the changing fortunes of garden
bird populations, most notably through the BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch.
3) Robin facts. Almost
six million pairs of Robins breed in the UK. Most will only live
for about two years but the oldest recorded reached the ripe old
age of eight years four months. During the winter some of the Robins
in our parks and gardens will actually have come to us from Scandinavia
to spend the winter.
4) Beautiful images
of Robins are available for use alongside this article by emailing
our digital image library (see contacts below).
8) To download a copy
of this press release as a PDF click here
(39kb)
Contacts.
Martin Fowlie (BTO
Press Officer)
01842-750050 (office)
Mike Toms (Garden BirdWatch
Organiser)
01842-750050 (office)
BTO Digital Image Library
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