Common Birds Census
The
Common Birds Census (CBC) was a major volunteer fieldwork project
of the BTO during almost forty years between 1962 and 2000, funded
by JNCC. Its
main function of monitoring trends in the UK populations of common
breeding birds has now passed to the BTO/RSPB/JNCC
Breeding Bird Survey (BBS).
The CBC used a full version of the territory-mapping census method,
as described in depth in the CBC Instructions of 1983.
As well as numbers of territories, from which population trends
were assessed, this method produces a map for each species, census
plot and year to show exactly where the birds were (and were not)
holding territory.
CBC was enthusiastically supported by BTO members, several of whom
achieved more than thirty continuous years of mapping censuses.
It was the work of CBC volunteers that drew attention to a number
of serious declines among common and widespread species, such as
Skylark and Willow
Tit, and provided the evidence by which they (alongside a number
of rare birds) have become high priorities for conservation effort.
CBC also documented how, for species such as Sparrowhawk
and Stock Dove, environmental
change brought recovery and population expansion. Sharp drops in
population, for Wrens and
other small birds after cold winters and for Whitethroats
after the failure of rains in West Africa, helped to demonstrate
the importance of these factors in determining the abundance of
these species. More than 10,000 CBC surveys were completed, at more
than 1,500 different sites. Results to 1988 were documented fully
in a popular book, Population Trends in British Breeding Birds.

Although the CBC is no longer running as a wide-scale project,
data from the CBC remain constantly in use for the assessment of
long-term population changes, and are displayed – mostly in
the form of joint CBC/BBS trends – in our report on Breeding
Birds of the Wider Countryside. Maps of well over a million
bird territories are archived in new storage areas at the BTO HQ
in Thetford, and are accessed frequently for a variety of research
projects. We continue to add to the databases where new surveys
are conducted at established CBC sites.
The
CBC method is no longer used for large-scale population monitoring
in the UK because it requires intensive observation at each site
– the less intensive transect methods of BBS cover more sites
and detect trends more efficiently. CBC mapping remains, however,
the most accurate practical way to determine the numbers and distribution
of breeding birds within a relatively small study site, and is widely
used by BTO staff and other researchers for studies where a high
level of detail is required. The original CBC Instructions
(12 A4 pages) are out of print but can be supplied from BTO HQ as
a photocopy. Plans are in hand to add these to the BTO web site,
thus documenting how CBC volunteers operated in the past, along
with a more concise, updated version to guide future use of the
method.
References
Marchant, J.H. (1983). Common
Birds Census instructions. BTO, Tring. 12pp.
Marchant, J.H., Hudson, R.,
Carter, S.P. & Whittington, P.A. (1990) Population Trends
in British Breeding Birds. BTO, Tring. |

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