April 3rd, 2019
The Irish population of wintering waterbirds has declined by
almost 40 per cent since the mid-1990s, according to a new study by BirdWatch
Ireland (BWI).
In the mid-1990s when the Irish Wetland Bird Survey began, there were over 1.2 million
wintering waterbirds across Ireland. A recent data analysis, however, places
that number at only 760,000.
In the latest issue of its annual scientific journal Irish Birds, the conservation charity
also found that numbers of waterbirds wintering in Ireland has dropped by 15
per cent over the past five years.
Ireland is an important wintering area for migratory
waterbirds that breed at Arctic latitudes and migrate south to spend the winter
months in Irish estuaries, coastal bays, rivers and lakes.
Wading bird species such as Dunlin, Golden Plover and
Redshank have experienced the sharpest decline, with a 19 per cent population
decline over the past five years.
In total, 27 species declined by over 10 per cent over the
course of just 5 years. Only seven migratory species increased in population
size by more than 10 per cent, BWI found.
“The rate of these declines is alarming,” said lead author of the study Brian Burke. “Numerous pressures can impact migratory birds on their breeding grounds, along their migration route, and at their wintering sites, and we know that climate change is playing a significant role.”
Milder winters have led to shifts in migratory behaviour as
many species no longer have to travel as far south as Ireland in order to find
ice-free wetlands.
Climate change is also making conditions increasingly
unsuitable on breeding grounds, leading to lower numbers of fully-matured
birds.
The BWI study also stressed that other factors are at play
in affecting migrating species, such as increased recreational use of wetlands,
land use change, and pollution.
In order to better conserve these migratory species, the Ireland
study goes on to find that strict enforcement of laws that protect sites
designated for waterbirds around the country is essential.
Brian Burke noted, however, that there are a “few positives”
from the study such as the increase in numbers of Whooper Swans and
Black-tailed Godwits that both come predominately from Iceland.
“We now have a minimum of 1,400 Little Egrets across the country – a species that wasn’t present in Ireland at all when the Irish Wetland Bird Survey first began in 1994,” he observed.
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