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PostPosted: Fri Aug 25, 2006 10:56 am 
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Location: Peterborough
BTO Press Releases - July/Aug 2006 - Item 9

No. 2006/08/34
August 2006

£20 Million Contribution by UK Birdwatchers :D

BTO Director, Professor Jeremy Greenwood will today tell 1,300 of the
World’s leading ornithologists, gathered in Germany, that “Britain leads the
World” in bird research, largely because British birdwatchers spend 1.6
million hours each year contributing to bird surveys.

Professor Jeremy Greenwood, the Director of the British Trust for
Ornithology (BTO), will today urge bird experts from around the world to
make full use of volunteer birdwatchers when monitoring changes in bird
populations and setting conservation agendas. In an hour-long lecture to the
24th International Ornithological Congress in Hamburg (see note below) he
will talk about Citizens, Science and Bird Conservation.

Writing about his lecture prior to his departure for Germany, Professor
Greenwood praised the achievements, as well as the efforts of birdwatchers:

“Amateurs make a major contribution to ornithology and bird conservation
science. They always have and there is no sign of their contribution
diminishing. They do between one and two million hours of work in the UK
alone each year.”

“Though they may have no formal qualifications, they have considerable
expertise, gained from many years of devotion to the subject. Areas to which
they have contributed include:

• the study of migration – by observation and through bird ringing
• distributional atlases
• censuses, monitoring and demographic studies
• breeding biology – through the BTO’s Nest Record Scheme

Their work has not only identified the declines of many species but has also
helped to discover the causes of those declines and how they can be
reversed.”

Professor Greenwood gave an example of the conservation benefits of counting
birds:

“The information obtained by British amateurs has assisted Government in
devising schemes to benefit birds and other wildlife on farms. It has fed
into reform of the Common Agricultural Policy and is used to produce one of
the UK Government’s Quality of Life indicators. Although similar monitoring
goes on in many countries around the world, Britain leads the world in the
involvement of birdwatchers in such serious scientific work.”

Writing in the State of the UK’s Birds 2005, published by
RSPB/BTO/WWT/CCW/EN/EHS and SNH yesterday (18 August), Graham Appleton (BTO)
wrote:

“Given that 2005 was the ‘Year of the Volunteer’, it seems appropriate to
quantify just how much volunteer effort goes into modern-day survey work. …
even rough calculations suggest a value into the millions of pounds. This
monitoring, and the benefits it brings to bird conservation, simply would
not be possible without the generous contribution of time, effort and
expertise by volunteer birdwatchers throughout the UK.”


Notes to Editors

1. The International Ornithological Congress takes place every four years.
The 24th Congress is taking place in Hamburg between 13th and 19th August.
At the start of each session of the conference an invited speaker addresses
the whole Congress, before the conference breaks up for workshops. Professor
Greenwood has been invited to give one of the nine plenary addresses. See
www.i-o-c.org for more information.

2. Jeremy Greenwood has been Director of the British Trust for Ornithology
since 1988 and is currently President of the European Ornithologists’ Union.

3. Jeremy Greenwood is one of the contributors to a new Radio 4 series on
Citizen Science. He expanded upon some of the points in this press release
in the programme transmitted on Wednesday, 9 August.

4. Photographs of Jeremy Greenwood, birdwatchers and bird species are
available from images@bto.org

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


For further information please contact:

Graham Appleton on 01842 750050 (office hours) or E-mail: press@bto.org
or 07974 668503 (Mobile)


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