From: James Alan Wolstencroft <gonolek@gmail.com>
Date: 2014-10-18 11:41
Subject: Scale of decline of UK migratory birds wintering in Africa

Dear Graeme,
Well said regarding e.g. The Decline in the Common Swift in the UK on Kenya Birds yesterday (see below).
It's a point I try to make, gently and with some attempt at humour, yet as firmly as possible, on the Net at least once a week, and in other ways every day.

As here:

http://africanaturalists.com/2014/10/10/swifts-swallows-and-martins-investigators-of-the-sky/

Many thanks to you and to the reverend T.W. Gladwin for saying this.

Undoubtedly there are influential forces, chiefly financial, yet powerful and insidious, hard at work behind the scenes, to caution (as an example) scientists employed in the UK's biodiversity conservation organisations from stating the obvious, whether it be in the mainstream or even electronic media.

James

Re: Scale of decline of UK migratory birds wintering in Africa
Posted by: "Graeme Backhurst" 
Friday Oct 17, 2014


A letter in the August 2014 British Birds 107: 484 from the Rev T. W Gladwin makes a very good point. His letter, entitled Decline in swift populations [in the UK], ends as follows:

"The continuing decrease in insect food availability is surely just as, if not more, important [as a decrease in the number of available nest sites]. When visiting the UK, several of my correspondents from East Africa and France, making comparisons with their local populations, have strongly suggested that the largest cause of declining Swift and other migrant bird populations is not abroad but here in Britain. My response to doubters is to ask: 'When did you last have to wash dead insects off the windscreen of your car?'"

It's commonly believed that the widespread use of insecticides by farmers in the UK has caused, believe it or not, a great reduction in insects and may well be the main reason why so many insectivorous birds have also declined dramatically.

It's also worth pointing out that virtually no British-bred birds come to Kenya.


Graeme Backhurst