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Number of robins visiting UK gardens hits 20-year high


British gardens also saw a ‘waxwing winter’ in this winter’s Big Garden Birdwatch, conservationists say. The number of robins visiting gardens hit a 20-year high in this winter’s Big Garden Birdwatch, conservationists said. Average numbers of the robin seen in gardens were up to their highest levels since 1986, making it the seventh most commonly seen bird in the citizen science survey in January. UK gardens also saw a “waxwing winter” with a huge number of the unusual migrant birds that flocked to the country from Scandinavia in search of food, the results from more than 497,000 people who took part in the survey showed. Waxwings arrive in the UK in large numbers once every seven to eight years when the berry crop fails in Scandinavia in what is known as an “irruption”, and were seen in about 11 times more gardens in 2017 than in the last couple of years. The birds, which have a dusky pink colouring with a black strip across the eye and a punk-like crest, were seen as far west as Wales and Northern Ireland, the RSPB, organiser of Birdwatch, said. Daniel Hayhow, a conservation scientist at the RSPB, said: “Flocks of these striking looking birds arrived in the UK along the North Sea coast and will have moved across the country in search of food, favouring gardens where they can feast on berries. “With it only happening once every seven to eight years, it will have been a treat for the lucky people who managed to catch a glimpse of one.” There was also a large jump in the number of visits from other migrant birds such as redwing, fieldfare and brambling as sub-zero temperatures on the continent forced them towards the UK’s milder conditions. Along with robins, blackbirds also had a good year, rising to third in the Birdwatch rankings and becoming the UK’s most widespread garden bird, spotted in 93% of gardens.

Read More: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/mar/30/number-of-robins-visiting-uk-gardens-hits-20-year-high#img-1

Posted by on Mar 30 2017. Filed under Wildlife. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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