Protected wildlife areas are 'welcome mats' for UK's bird newcomers
http://www.york.ac.uk/news-and-events/news/2013/research/welcome-mats/[font face=Serif][font size=5]Protected wildlife areas are 'welcome mats' for UK's bird newcomers[/font]
Posted on 10 April 2013
[font size=4]A new study by scientists at the University of York and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) shows that bird species which have colonised the UK in recent decades breed initially almost exclusively in nature reserves and other areas specially protected for wildlife. [/font]
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Published online in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B., the study shows that, of the 20 wetland bird species that bred for the first time in the UK since 1960, 18 bred first in these protected areas. Protected areas were crucial as the population established and grew. Once established in reserves, the birds began to spread out into other locations as they expanded their ranges across the country.
For some warmth-loving southern species, such as Little Egrets and Cettis Warblers, these arrivals appear to be in response to a changing climate. For others, such as Common Cranes, they are a response to other factors, such as recovery from historical loss of habitat or persecution.
The mainstay of traditional conservation has been to establish protected areas to provide refuges against the loss of habitats and other threats in the surrounding countryside. Ironically, this study comes at a time when the value of protected areas is being questioned in some quarters because climate change and other factors cause animals to move away from their traditional haunts and into new regions.
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