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Press Releases - Sept/Oct 2005 - Item 5

No. 2005/10/31
07 October 2005

What’s number one in East Yorkshire gardens?

We suspect the Blackbird may be the most common garden bird across East Yorkshire but we don’t know! The BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch survey is now in its 11th year and has been keeping a close eye on the comings and goings of Britain’s garden birds. The next step is to look at a local level so we can see which birds are doing best in different parts of the country. The BTO needs more garden owners to help record birds in private gardens around the East Yorkshire area.

Birds are everywhere, but our first daily contact with them is usually over our mug of morning tea as we look out into our gardens. These spaces provide a valuable habitat not only for birds but also for a wealth of other wildlife. The BTO/CJ Garden BirdWatch survey has been monitoring the use of gardens by birds for over a decade and has built up a fantastic nationwide picture of what is going on. We need your help to turn the focus towards what is happening at the local level so we can look for differences between regions.

We need more people in East Yorkshire to record the birds that visit their gardens and we would like to double the number of participants that we currently have in East Yorkshire. It is a great way to take part in an interesting survey and to contribute, along with thousands of others, to an important monitoring scheme” says Martin Fowlie from the Garden BirdWatch Team.

"I grew up in East Yorkshire and have fond memories of watching birds in my garden as a child. East Yorkshire is nationally famous for its bird reserves and it would be great to have good information on what is also happening in the county’s gardens.” Martin adds.

The BTO scheme needs people in East Yorkshire to record the occurrence of birds in their gardens. It has been running its Garden BirdWatch survey since 1995 and has highlighted changes in the use of the nation’s gardens by different bird species. Some 129 participants currently take part in Garden BirdWatch in East Yorkshire and send in simple weekly records of the bird species using their gardens. To receive a free information pack, phone on 01842 750050 or write to GBW, Room 31, 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 with 129 in East Yorkshire. 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) Colour photographs. Images of garden birds are freely available for use in association with this press release. Please contact to request an electronic version.

3) 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.

4) The top 10 UK garden species and the percentage of gardens in which they are recorded

Species
% of gardens
  Species
% of gardens
1) Blackbird
97
  6) Collared Dove
79
2) Blue Tit
90
  7) Dunnock
77
3) Robin
81
  8) House Sparrow
76
4) Greenfinch
79
  9) Chaffinch
75
5) Woodpigeon
79
  10) Great Tit
74

5) The BTO has an ISDN line available for radio interviews.

For further information please contact:

Martin Fowlie on 01842 750050 or email (during office hours)

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