Showing posts with label RSPB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label RSPB. Show all posts

Friday, 22 September 2023

HELPING YOUR BIRDS SURVIVE THIS WINTER

Mixed finches at feeding station   L Bimson


  As you sit snugly by the fire this winter, spare a thought for our feathered friends. Their survival skills are tested to the limit when winter tightens its grip and food becomes hard to find. Freezing weather is a potential death sentence for many birds, but with just a little water, food and shelter, gardens can become a vital haven for birds and other wildlife

In days of yore the RSPB held a ‘Feed the Birds Day event’ every year on the third week of October.  Nowadays we advocate people feed our birds all year round and the events have ceased. However we at RSPB Liverpool think it’s still a good time of year - as the nights draw in and our birds have less time to feed, to give out a timely reminder. 

October is the month the clocks go back and the winter nights start drawing in - it's the time when birds and other wildlife need a little extra help as the first frost looms. So please fill your feeders, clean your bird tables, put out some water and give a helping hand to the wild birds around you. And the sooner you start feeding them, the more birds you'll see when you sit down to enjoy the RSPB's Big Garden Birdwatch in January! You may be surprised how the number changes according to the food you put out. And don't forget a place to sleep, start putting up nest boxes now to provide roost sites for smaller birds. They will then be used for breeding later in the year.

 


IN COLD WEATHER IT IS ESTIMATED THAT SMALL BIRDS NEED TO EAT 30-40% OF THEIR BODY WEIGHT EACH DAY’

Feeding suggestions.
·         High calorie wild seed mixtures, and straight seeds i.e. sunflower hearts
There are different mixes for feeders and for bird tables and ground feeding. The better mixtures contain plenty of flaked maize, sunflower seeds, and peanut granules.
Foraging Goldcrest  L Bimson
Small seeds, such as millet, attract mostly house sparrows, dunnocks, finches, reed buntings and collared doves, while flaked maize is taken readily by blackbirds. Tits and greenfinches favour peanuts and sunflower seeds. Pinhead oatmeal is excellent for many birds. 
Fat balls,suet cakes and pellets are excellent winter foods. You can make your own by mixing melted beef dripping and a mixture of ingredients such as seeds, nuts, dried fruit, oatmeal, cheese and cake crumbs. use about one-third fat to two thirds mixture. Allow to set in a feeding container, empty coconut shell or simply turn out onto the bird table once solid.
Male Blackcap eating fatcake  L Bimson

Mesh bags – a warning- Peanuts and fat balls are regularly sold in nylon mesh bags. Never put out any food in mesh bags. These may trap birds’ feet and even cause broken or torn off feet and legs. Birds with a barbed tongue, eg woodpeckers, can become trapped by their beaks.




·         Bread: has very low nutritional content and is essentially filler, ideally it should only be fed as part of a varied diet. Soaked bread is more easily ingested than stale dry bread.

·         Windfall and over ripe fresh fruit i.e. Apples, pears & other soft fruit. Dried fruits must be soaked before putting out, sultanas, raisins, currants.
Mistle thrush  L Bimson

·         Peanuts: are rich in fats and are of major importance to tit and greenfinch flocks during the winter and cold spring months. Salted peanuts should never be used for bird food.  

·         Rice and cereals: Cooked rice, brown or white (without salt added) is beneficial and readily accepted by all species during severe winter weather.  Porridge oats must never be cooked, since this makes them glutinous and can harden around a bird's beak. Uncooked porridge oats are readily taken by a number of bird species. It is best offered dry, with a supply of drinking water nearby.

·         Coconut: Give fresh coconut only, in the shell. Rinse out any residues of the sweet coconut water from the middle of the coconut before hanging it out to prevent the build-up of black mildew. Desiccated coconut should never be used as it may swell once inside a bird and cause death 
· 
   Salt: Garden birds are practically unable to metabolise salt, which in high quantity is toxic, affecting the nervous system. Under normal circumstances in the wild, birds are unlikely to take harmful amounts of salt.  Never put out salted food onto the bird table, and never add salt to bird baths to keep water ice-free in the winter. 

Blackbirds fighting over cake  L Bimson
·   Other kitchen scraps: cake crumbs, a little mild grated hard cheese, leftover cooked potato - plain baked, roast and pastry.

·    

   Wiggly worms? Mealworms, yes I know they look like shiny maggots, but they are not so squishy, and handling them is rather like grabbing a handful of animated rice! More to the point the birds love them. Serve live or dried. It is very important that any mealworms fed to birds are fresh. Any dead or discoloured ones should not be used as they can cause problems such as salmonella poisoning.
Robins loves mealworms  L Bimson

'Wild birds are incredibly important in the lives of many people; the RSPB's celebrates this special relationship and encourages everyone to feed garden birds.

Good hygiene at bird feeding stations is sensible.  

When a large number of birds are attracted into an area to feed, the danger of disease increases.
Prevention is always better than a cure, and is the best thing you can do to help the birds.
Monitor the food you put out regularly. If the food is taking days to clear either from consider reducing the amount of food offered. Use a bird table and/or hanging feeders. A ground feeding tray is  easier to keep clean and moved if all the food hasn’t been ate before nightfall.* Rats are attracted to leftover food and often carry diseases, which can affect birds or humans.
Keep bird tables and surrounding areas clean and free from droppings or mouldy food, thus avoiding the risk of infection by providing breeding grounds for parasites and bacteria. Clean and wash the bird table and hanging feeders regularly using 5% disinfectant solution, and try and move feeding stations to a new area frequently to prevent droppings accumulating underneath. Water containers should be rinsed out as droppings can accumulate in bird baths. Your personal hygiene is also important. Please wear gloves when cleaning feeders and bird tables, and always wash your hands when finished

Where is the best place to put a bird table in my garden?

Bird tables should be placed where the birds are safe and will be able to feed undisturbed. Avoid putting them near fences or dense hedges, where cats can easily get to them.  If there is a small bush nearby, birds can use this as a look-out point to make sure it is safe. 
Where cats are a problem, avoid putting food on the ground, but use a bird table where cats cannot reach it.
Place feeders high off the ground but away from surfaces from which a cat could jump.

Place spiny plants (such as holly) or an uncomfortable surface around the base of the feeding station to prevent cats sitting underneath it.

Make the table-stand slippery using a metal post, or plastic bottles around non-metal posts.

Fieldfare and Redwing on Pyracantha.
Plant wildlife-friendly vegetation, such as prickly berry bearing bushes like pyracantha, berberis and cotoneaster and thick climbers in the garden to provide secure cover for birds. These should be close enough to where birds feed to provide cover, but not so close that cats can use it to stalk birds.  This kind of planting may also provide food and nesting sites.💚




Friday, 9 April 2021

1 million take part in record-breaking RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch

Top Bird House Sparrow
Over a million people across the UK spent an hour watching the birds that visit their garden or outdoor space, double last year’s participation numbers The Big Garden Birdwatch is the world’s largest wildlife survey and gives RSPB scientists insights into how our garden birds are faring both across the country and here in Merseyside. Many people sought solace in the wildlife in their local area during the worst crisis this country has faced since WW2 The number of nature lovers who took part in the RSPB’s Big Garden Birdwatch soared to a million people this winter after a year of lockdown restrictions saw people turn to nature for comfort. 
Now in its 42nd year, the Big Garden Birdwatch is a chance for people of all ages to count the number of birds that visit their garden, helping the RSPB build up a picture of how birds are faring. This year, over a million people across the country took part counting 17 million birds, with over 13,000 people taking part across Merseyside. Hopes were raised for a bumper participation year after results from a YouGov survey revealed the pandemic is making the public more aware of nature in their local area, with 41% seeing wildlife near their homes over the last 12 months that they had never noticed before. The YouGov survey of 2,071 adults across the UK revealed 63% of people said watching the birds and hearing their song added to their enjoyment of life since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, with more than half of those surveyed (51%) believing the pandemic has made them more aware of the nature around them.
 When the final Big Garden Birdwatch results were counted, the RSPB was blown away by the phenomenal response from the public. Over the first three days of submissions alone, numbers were up 85% compared to the same time period in 2020. Beccy Speight, RSPB CEO said: “We have been blown away by the enthusiasm with which people have taken part in the Birdwatch this year. Lockdowns have brought few benefits, but the last year has either started or reignited a love of nature for many people, right on their doorsteps. “This winter has been a bleak ordeal but as the dawn chorus starts to burst into song and the blossom starts to flower from the trees once more, we are emerging from this pandemic a new generation of nature lovers. “We hope the Birdwatch has kindled a new passion for wildlife for the thousands who took part for the first time this year – we need every voice raised to stand up for nature. The wildlife that gave us so much interest and solace is now just a fraction of what should be there.
On the back of this wave of public support, we need the government to take the global leadership, policy and legislative opportunities open to it this year to reverse the decline and restore nature now.” The charity is also urging members of the public to take care as they return to the countryside near them as nature’s busiest season is underway. As breeding season begins, birds and other wildlife could be nesting nearby, with over half of England’s most threatened breeding birds nesting on or near the ground. To be sure to help the wildlife near you this spring, be sure to follow the Countryside Code when exploring your local area. 
Male Starling Nester

The Big Garden Birdwatch, which was held over the last weekend in January, revealed that nationally the house sparrow held on to its number one spot, but 16 out of the top 20 bird species showed declines in average counts compared to last year. Starlings slid down the ranking from 2nd place for the first time since 2010, with numbers down 83% since 1979. Further national declines were recorded for greenfinch and chaffinch, with the lowest average for both types of bird ever recorded during the Big Garden Birdwatch.

 
Fighting Cock Robins

Only robins, blackbirds, carrion crows and the song thrush saw an increase on 2020 across the UK. Over its four decades, Big Garden Birdwatch has highlighted the winners and losers in the garden bird world. It was first to alert the RSPB to the decline in song thrush numbers, which are still down 78% compared to the first Big Garden Birdwatch in 1979. This species was a firm fixture in the top 10 in 1979. By 2009, its numbers were less than half those recorded in 1979, it came in at 20th in the rankings this year, seen in just 9% of gardens.
Big Garden Birdwatch Results 2021
The house sparrow remained at the top of the Big Garden Birdwatch rankings in Merseyside as the most commonly seen garden bird. Found in nearly 54% of Merseyside gardens, across the country more than 2.6 million house sparrows were sighted throughout the weekend. Meanwhile, the starling and blackbird joined house sparrows to form the top three most sighted birds in Merseyside as local people enjoyed watching the wildlife found in their gardens. Beccy added: “One way you can help revive our world is to bring nature to you. Your garden, balcony, and even windowsill are potential havens for wildlife, and in April we’re launching a digital platform, Nature on Your Doorstep, to help show you how.”
Female Blackbird



Throughout the first half of the spring term the nation’s school children took part in the RSPB’s Big Schools Birdwatch. The UK-wide survey of birds in school grounds saw over 21,000 school children and their teachers spend an hour in nature counting the birds. Woodpigeon was the most numerous species seen with an average of 9 per school; and was seen in 85% of all schools that took part. Blackbird was a close second with an average of 8 per school.
Wood Pigeon



 For a full round-up of all the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch
results and to see which birds were visiting gardens where you live, visit www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch Discover more about the RSPB’s exciting new Nature on Your Doorstep resources here: www.rspb.org.uk/yourdoorstep



Record you garden birds all year long with the BTO       https://bto.org/our-science/projects/gbw  
And if you have nesting birds -   https://www.bto.org/our-science/projects/gns/about/nesting-neighbours

Wednesday, 13 January 2021

Organisations unite against neonicotinoids decision


RSPB joins other environmental organisations to unite against the recent Government decision on neonicotinoid pesticides pan-uk.org/organisations-



Got Borage in your garden?








Monday, 25 May 2020

RSPB Liverpool on Nature Watch, BBC Radio Merseyside, 23rd May 2020


Although things are quiet on the RSPB Liverpool events front due to the coronavirus, Chris has still been contributing to BBC Radio Merseyside in his role of nature watcher. Most recently, as well as answering listeners’ questions, he discussed a number of nature-related topics with Helen Jones, including:
·         Screaming swifts and how to help map them (https://www.swiftmapper.org.uk/). 

Common swift – photo from Wikimedia: AlexeySokolov1971/CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)

·         The RSPB’s Big Wild Sleepout Lockdown Edition, which took place on Saturday, 23rd May.
·       #NoMowMay, which some councils have participated in this year, leaving grassy areas uncut so that wildflowers can emerge, supporting pollinating insects such as bees and hoverflies. Bees are one of our most important pollinators, and we rely on their hard work for much of what we eat. They pollinate the flowers that produce some of our vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds, and help to spread colour through our landscape. Bees are vital in keeping up the health of our ecosystems, so we need to give them the biggest chance possible to thrive.
Protected verge, Northants – photo from Wikimedia: Michael Trolove, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13472961
·         What to do if you find a baby bird on the ground:
If it looks healthy and well, like the young linnet in the photo below, leave it alone.
Fledgling linnet on the ground at Garston Coastal Reserve – photo by @birderjack

If it’s being fed by a parent bird, like the young stonechat in the photo below, leave it alone.

Fledgling stonechat being fed by parent bird, Garston Coastal Reserve – photo by @birderjack

If it’s in the nest being fed or looking healthy and well, like the baby song thrushes in the photo below, leave it alone.
Song thrush feeding young in the nest – photo from RSPB Images

However, if it is definitely injured, seek advice from the RSPCA or a local wildlife charity.

·         Looking ahead, we should shortly be seeing some of our beautiful native orchids in flower – species such as the pyramidal orchid and the bee orchid.
Pyramidal orchid, Formby – photo by Chris Tynan


Bee orchid – photo from Wikimedia: Henry Hemming/CC BY (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)

All of the above can be found in our local area, without having to make a long trip to see them, and one of the few good things to come out of the coronavirus situation has been the increase in sightings – and thus knowledge about – of what we think of as ‘uncommon’ species around Merseyside. For example, eider ducks have been spotted flying along the Mersey and then roosting on a sandbank, then bobbing on the river; a cuckoo was seen flying along the river – no doubt using it as a navigational aid; local fields have provided a brief stopover for other birds on their way to their breeding grounds, etc. Without the eyes and ears of keen local naturalists who are currently unable to wander further afield, the presence of some of these species might have passed unnoticed.
If you would like to record your sightings, Merseyside BioBank has a link to an excellent resource, iRecord (https://www.brc.ac.uk/irecord/). Submitted, verified records are available to national recording schemes and societies, Local Environmental Records Centres, and other individual records and organisations, thus building up a crucial map of areas of importance for the wildlife that calls this island home, or which visits for a brief period.