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Parents lead young to fast food
Peanuts are fast food
for woodpeckers. Results show that 83% of all Great Spotted Woodpeckers
visiting gardens come to feed on peanuts, and it doesn’t stop
there. Adult birds locate supplies of peanuts and bring their young
back to feed on them.
Britons put out 16,000
tonnes of peanuts every year with which to feed the birds, which
is good news for woodpeckers and their young. Paul Stancliffe, Promotions
Officer at the BTO said “By bringing their young to garden
bird feeding stations and taking advantage of the peanut supplies,
adult woodpeckers are saving valuable foraging time; these are literally
fast food outlets for these birds.”
The British Trust for
Ornithology, in partnership with the Radio 4 ‘Shared Earth’
programme, launched a survey asking people to study the Great Spotted
Woodpeckers in their gardens. Participants were asked to provide
information on how woodpeckers were using their gardens. Paul Stancliffe
added, “The response was fantastic, over 6,000 reports were
received from almost 2,000 woodpecker watchers.”
What has become clear
is that adult woodpeckers are checking out gardens for food first,
and then bringing the kids along when they are old enough. The food
they seek out the most is peanuts, with 83% of all birds reported
feeding on these. Peanut cake is another favourite. Peanuts have
a high fat content and are literally fast food for the young birds,
at a time when they need to put on weight quickly. Jamie Oliver
eat your heart out! By mid-September, these young birds are fully-grown
and begin to use gardens less and less, presumably returning to
their natural woodland habitat and other foods.
The BTO wants to hear
from people with Great Spotted Woodpeckers in their gardens. If
you have woodpeckers in your garden and would like to get involved
in the BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch, please send your name and address
details to BTO, GBW, Room 66, The Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk, IP24
2PU, email
or telephone 01842-750050, to receive a free information pack.
Notes for editors
1. There are three
species of woodpecker that breed in Britain; these are the Great
Spotted Woodpecker, the Lesser Spotted Woodpecker and the Green
Woodpecker. The Great Spotted Woodpecker is the most common.
2. The Great Spotted
Woodpeckers diet in the wild includes, insects, seeds, and occasionally
the eggs and young of small birds.
3. 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. 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
4. 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.
5. More details on
the results of the Great Spotted Woodpecker survey can be found
in the latest issue of Bird Table Magazine.
6. Bird Table Magazine
is published quarterly and sent free to all BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatchers.
An annual subscription to the project costs just £12 and all
new joiners will receive a free copy of the BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch
Book (which normally retails for £9.99).
7. Images. For more
images similar to the one overleaf, for use in association with
this press release, please contact
to request an electronic version. Please quote reference number
2006/11/66
8. Bird Information.
For lots of facts and figures about Great Spotted Woodpeckers and
other garden birds go to www.bto.org/birdfacts
9. The BTO has an ISDN
line available for radio interviews.
10. To download a copy
of this press release as a PDF click here
(61kb)
Contacts.
Paul Stancliffe (BTO
Press Officer)
01842-750050 (office)
BTO Digital Image Library
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