Curlew Action
Curlew Action
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WEBINAR: 2024 UK breeding season
Curlew Action Trustee Russell Wynn chairs this free webinar looking at the 2023 breeding season for Curlews in the UK, with updates from Curlew projects around the country.
⌚ TIMESTAMPS
00:10 Introduction and welcome by Russell Wynn.
04:56 Jon Avon, Dartmoor Curlew Recovery Project Officer, Duchy of Cornwall (Dartmoor, Devon)
11:00 Dan Gornall, Research Officer, WWT (Severn and Avon Vales)
15:54 Mike Pollard, Upper Thames Wader Group (Oxfordshire)
22:09 Caleb Stradling, Curlew Country (Shropshire Hills)
28:08 Paul Noyes, Wader Project Officer, BTO (Yorkshire Dales)
34:26 Matthew Trevelyan (Nidderdale National Landscape, North Yorkshire)
41:41 Susannah Bleakley, Curlew Recovery South Lakes (Lake District, Cumbria)
48:04 Katie Gibb, Conservation Officer Antrim Plateau, RSPB NI (Northern Ireland)
55:01 Leo Smith, SOS Save Our Curlews, Shropshire Ornithological Society (Shropshire)
1:01:15 Q&A session
► Donate to Curlew Action: www.curlewaction.org/support-us/
► Sign up to the Curlew Action newsletter: www.curlewaction.org/contact/
► Upcoming webinars and events: www.curlewaction.org/events/
📚 RESOURCES
► Scientific papers on Curlews and Whimbrels: www.curlewaction.org/scientific-papers-on-curlews-and-whimbrels/
► Fieldworker toolkit: www.curlewaction.org/supporting-conservation/
► World Curlew Day: www.curlewaction.org/world-curlew-day/
► Kids: www.curlewaction.org/kids-pack/
มุมมอง: 701

วีดีโอ

WEBINAR: Curlews and social science
มุมมอง 139หลายเดือนก่อน
The threats facing Curlew are closely linked to people, how we use the land and our relationship with it. Conservation needs social science. Curlew Action Founder and Director Mary Colwell hosts this thought-provoking webinar discussing Curlews and social science. If you are enjoying our content, please consider making a donation: www.curlewaction.org/support-us/ ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:10 Introduction...
WEBINAR: Curlews and development
มุมมอง 1644 หลายเดือนก่อน
There is innate tension between developing the land and the needs of ground-nesting birds like Curlew. Is there a practical solution? Curlew Action Trustee John Miller hosts this free webinar discussing Curlews and development. If you are enjoying our content, please consider making a donation: www.curlewaction.org/donate-to-curlew-action/ ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by John Mil...
WEBINAR: Curlews of the World
มุมมอง 1574 หลายเดือนก่อน
Celebrating the curlew species found around the world, and discussing the similarities and differences in the threats they face and the work being done by conservationists and scientists to learn more about them and to conserve them. ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by Mary Colwell. 03:18 Professor Richard Fullar: Bending the curve: Are we saving the Far Eastern Curlew? 15:20 Brad Wi...
WEBINAR: Curlews and Extinction
มุมมอง 1175 หลายเดือนก่อน
Curlew Action General Manager Ellen Bradley chairs this free webinar looking at Curlews and Extinction. We've already lost the Slender-billed and the Eskimo Curlews to extinction - are we at risk of losing other Curlew species too? And what does that mean for other wildlife, and for humans? ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by Mary Colwell. 01:00 Matthew Goodall: The multiple benefits...
WEBINAR: Curlew diets
มุมมอง 4977 หลายเดือนก่อน
Curlew Action Founder and Director Mary Colwell chairs this free webinar looking at what we know - and what we don't know - about the diet of Curlews. Plus, an insight into insect and invertebrate decline. ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by Mary Colwell. 04:48 Dr Rachel Taylor: Curlew diet: Going down the garden to eat worms... 16:23 Professor Dave Goulson: Why do insects matter? 29...
WEBINAR: Curlews and energy production
มุมมอง 1599 หลายเดือนก่อน
Curlew Action Trustee Roger Morgan-Grenville chairs this free webinar looking at the impact of energy production projects, such as offshore wind farms and 'undergrounding' of power cables, on Curlews and other wildlife. ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by Roger Morgan-Grenville. 03:50 Chris Baines: Curlews and the Natural Grid 19:24 Sam Franks: Eurasian Curlews in the North Sea, and ...
WEBINAR - Curlew breeding season: 2023 UK overview
มุมมอง 28811 หลายเดือนก่อน
Curlew Action Trustee Russell Wynn chairs this free webinar looking at the 2023 breeding season for Curlews in the UK, with updates from Curlew projects around the country. ⌚ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Introduction and welcome by Russell Wynn, with an overview of the UK Status update. 07:30 Barney Sykes: Curlew Recovery South Lakes (lowland South Cumbria) 16:06 Matt Trevelyan: Nidderdale National Landsca...
Webinar: Curlews on the coast
มุมมอง 293ปีที่แล้ว
Curlew Action Trustee Mike Smart chairs this free webinar on Curlews on the coast, featuring three speakers: Dr Katharine Bowgen, Research Ecologist at BTO Cymru: presenting on the results of her upcoming scientific paper on Eurasian Curlew habitat use on the Welsh and east Irish coastlines in winter. Marie Donnez, 2nd year PhD student in the Littoral Environnement and Sociétés (LIENSs) laborat...
WEBINAR: Curlews on the move
มุมมอง 232ปีที่แล้ว
WEBINAR: Curlews on the move
WEBINAR: Are we fighting hard enough for nature?
มุมมอง 124ปีที่แล้ว
In addition to identifying key issues in the fight for nature, our panel discussed potential solutions. Key questions included: - How can we influence potential land-use policies and strategies, including farming, forestry, renewable energy and nature recovery? - What is working well in UK conservation and what isn't? - Are current conservation models effective and do they include sufficient ...
WEBINAR: Curlew and meadows
มุมมอง 332ปีที่แล้ว
WEBINAR: Curlew and meadows
Webinar: Curlew in myths and legends
มุมมอง 253ปีที่แล้ว
The haunting call of the Curlew has been inspiring artists, poets and musicians for centuries. One of only four surviving manuscripts of Old English poetry is called 'The Seafarer' and includes the line 'I take my gladness in the sound... of Curlew instead of the laughter of men'. Myths like The Severn Whistlers would stop miners and fishermen from working the next day if they heard an eerie c...
Curlews and Silage follow up session
มุมมอง 234ปีที่แล้ว
Following on from the fascinating presentations in our previous webinar about Curlews and silage, we are holding a further session to discuss the points raised in the previous webinar - can we have Curlews and silage? During our previous webinar we heard from Russel Wynn from the Curlew Recovery Partnership, who gave us an overview of the state of Curlews in the UK. Amanda Perkins, from Curlew...
Webinar Curlews and silage
มุมมอง 365ปีที่แล้ว
Curlews nest on the ground in open areas away from trees that could harbour predators. Many nesting sites are on silage fields. Silage is cut earlier in the season than hay which means chicks and eggs get caught up in farm machinery. How can ensure silage fields safe for ground nesting birds like Curlew, while still keeping the farm economically viable?
Webinar: Cost of a Curlew
มุมมอง 293ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Cost of a Curlew
Webinar: The biodiversity crisis. Translating COP15 into action
มุมมอง 134ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: The biodiversity crisis. Translating COP15 into action
Webinar: why do we need a Natural History GCSE?
มุมมอง 254ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: why do we need a Natural History GCSE?
Webinar: Managing the uplands
มุมมอง 511ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Managing the uplands
Curlews and Predators
มุมมอง 8162 ปีที่แล้ว
Curlews and Predators
Into the Red - David Gray
มุมมอง 6672 ปีที่แล้ว
Into the Red - David Gray
Webinar: Forestry
มุมมอง 3482 ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar: Forestry
Webinar - Curlews and Culture
มุมมอง 2212 ปีที่แล้ว
Webinar - Curlews and Culture
An appeal from David Gray
มุมมอง 1.8K2 ปีที่แล้ว
An appeal from David Gray
World Curlew Day 2022
มุมมอง 1412 ปีที่แล้ว
World Curlew Day 2022
GCSE IN NATURAL HISTORY CONFIRMED
มุมมอง 2062 ปีที่แล้ว
GCSE IN NATURAL HISTORY CONFIRMED
Curlew Action
มุมมอง 3452 ปีที่แล้ว
Curlew Action
ONLINE SEMINAR: HEADSTARTING
มุมมอง 2452 ปีที่แล้ว
ONLINE SEMINAR: HEADSTARTING
ONLINE SEMINAR CURLEWS ON FARMLAND
มุมมอง 4342 ปีที่แล้ว
ONLINE SEMINAR CURLEWS ON FARMLAND
The Last of the Curlews
มุมมอง 5653 ปีที่แล้ว
The Last of the Curlews

ความคิดเห็น

  • @outoftownr3906
    @outoftownr3906 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very simple.Sympathetic farming operations & thorough predator control.Foxes,Badgers,hedgehogs,stoats,crows & the Curlew will be common.

  • @collagerippinglandscpaes6657
    @collagerippinglandscpaes6657 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I really found this very inspiring speakers being a big fan of our Curlew ! thank you

  • @timnewton9422
    @timnewton9422 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Here in North Cumbria we have found 4 nests and 4 chicks have hatched this week. So some positivity

  • @timnewton9422
    @timnewton9422 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for sharing this. Very informative, I'm in my first year of curlew spotting. I have a nest on the stubble field behind my house

  • @Ornithology_Guernsey-ws7em
    @Ornithology_Guernsey-ws7em ปีที่แล้ว

    Really pleased to have found this - very informative and helpful. Guernsey has a small overwintering population of Curlew.

  • @nickchristian2506
    @nickchristian2506 ปีที่แล้ว

    Plenty of commonsense comment especially from Ian Newton. Tree planting near me in Sutherland has had a detrimental effect on breeding Greenshanks. These areas are also fenced to stop grazing this drastically degrades the habitat and fosters predators. The local shepherd legally deployed two Larsen traps and caught 44 crows in three Spring months. Not one pair of locally breeding Greenshanks lost eggs to crows.

  • @nickchristian2506
    @nickchristian2506 ปีที่แล้ว

    Really great account of head-starting Spoonbill Sandpipers. Good effort as long as their breeding, feeding and migration staging habitat is preserved. Same goes for all wader species.

  • @bagobeans
    @bagobeans ปีที่แล้ว

    I saw the animated movie on the ABC Afterschool Special in 1972. Never knew it was a book until I found one at a thrift store. Loved the sad story.

  • @michaelashworth7294
    @michaelashworth7294 ปีที่แล้ว

    Curlews make my heart sing. Beautiful birds and I'm so lucky to live on the west pennine moors in Lancashire where I see them on a daily basis next to my house between March to the end of June.❤

    • @lksf9820
      @lksf9820 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You will have heard about the huge windfarm proposals up there then?

    • @michaelashworth7294
      @michaelashworth7294 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@lksf9820 won't be on the west pennine moors its a designated SSSI

  • @devrim-oguz
    @devrim-oguz ปีที่แล้ว

    The song is beautiful. I want to find it but I can't 😢

  • @pookspeak9529
    @pookspeak9529 ปีที่แล้ว

    I am Fred Bodsworth's oldest Granddaughter and just came across this video today. My Grandfather was a big part of my life and I loved him very much. I am so glad my kids had the opportunity to know and love their Papa Fred. He was fascinating, intelligent, gentle, and humorous. I could tell you so many fun stories. We took many camping trips with him and my Grandmother Margaret and the rest of the family growing up and I remember those days of my childhood so fondly. He would have been very interested by the present political and post-Pandemic landscape which brings me to my favorite book of his "The Atonement of Ashley Morden" and the theme of super bugs. Just some thoughts... Miss you Gramps. Please feel free to reach out.

  • @devrim-oguz
    @devrim-oguz ปีที่แล้ว

    What's the song at the beginning? Even Shazam couldn't find it.

  • @portcullis5622
    @portcullis5622 ปีที่แล้ว

    In the lowland river valleys, the sad fact is that ground nesting waders such as curlew and lapwing have trouble finding nesting spots that won't be disturbed by early spring agricultural operations, such as harvesting of grass for silage and ploughing in very early spring.

  • @portcullis5622
    @portcullis5622 ปีที่แล้ว

    One of the most beautiful sights and sounds of the British countryside. I saw a flock of nearly 40 curlew over a lake near Ripon, North Yorkshire the other day. At one point, they flew towards me in unison over the lake. An awesome sight.

  • @moritzn.g.7205
    @moritzn.g.7205 ปีที่แล้ว

    Beautiful footage!

  • @linedallaire6637
    @linedallaire6637 ปีที่แล้ว

    We had many of this bird in the fields when we started doing hay in 2000.... now, they look like gone in our fields in eastern Ontario....

  • @stephenwalker850
    @stephenwalker850 ปีที่แล้ว

    Dae yous ever see these 🦄, Jeffer Dupaldson is looking fur thum

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why were the older people not involved in the debate, what a waste of a debate.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 ปีที่แล้ว

    There are too many false story telling already in schools, many parents have taken their children away from the schools teaching false stories about wildlife and nature.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 ปีที่แล้ว

    How do we deal with Mary Colwell a collaborator with the BBC who have passed on propaganda as facts, I find it incredible that she has asked for a GCSE in Natural History, will it be reality or fiction.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 ปีที่แล้ว

    How do we set out a curriculum as there are years of propaganda to be extracted from the reality, the propaganda that has been passed from Professors to students for years. The disney years have ruined our Natural History not helped by organisations such as Wild Justice and all those involved in that, the RSPB who have failed our wildlife and our habitat who's reports have been incorporated into our books of learning. this will need to be removed before any learning begins.

  • @Ma-Kies
    @Ma-Kies ปีที่แล้ว

    Amazing.....the birds happines at the winter...

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 ปีที่แล้ว

    What are you doing to stop habitat destruction by the RSPB who are planting trees on prime uplands for curlew and many other waders and ground nesting birds that will be displaced from these prime areas.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Deciduous versus Coniferous Stands as to Natural History of Successional Stages known to be effective, efficient, nutrient processing of slower water movements in Riparian uplands where streams, bogs, lochs, ponds, rivers, and that connectivity of flow, hydrology, instream cover or structure of channel or otherwise. Thess areas are the drivers for diverse Insect and Amphibian, Reptile, Invertebrate communities that are the formation or the natural design of nutrient functioning, absorption, below these waters surface as well.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Estuaries are the brackish, saline prone (Salinity levels assessed) freshwater/saltwater interfaces to ascertain the dynamic areas includes processes involved with the Management of Oversight Committees and Broaden Sociological change can re-educate the natural processes of these dynamic Creatures. This includes Anadromous lifestyles of Organisms such as various Salmonids to outmigrate to the Ocean, going from freshwater to salt. That lifestyle is gainful as the gain size, weight, and breeding potentials for integration back to their origins in these freshwater ecosystems.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amphipoda or beach hoppers are dynamic intertidal Group of Species known to be eaten by many Species on the beach front which does need downed woody debris, nesting strata (natural), cover or lack of cover for some Killdeer type specialists where they just hope to blend in and not be discovered.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Insect and other pest like wildlife need to be explained in the Context of the Web of Life from Headwaters to Sea.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Plant Associations or relevees can be directed towards broader Associations of like Species ( Riparian or wetland functioning) of Native Reeds, Rushes, Cattails, Bulrushes, and other categorical Associations of plants by similarities of habitat characteristics, aspect, topography, cliffs or rock formations, and other natural Strata utilized for the Broader Guild of Avian Species being focused on. Seasonal patterns can help establish trends which are demonstrating effectiveness of Recovery Techniques.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Life began form natural Freshwater Processing, organic cycles, patterns, topographies, landscapes, Lochs, Rivers, Wetlands, Grasslands, Oak Woodlands that are crucial for larger wildlife production of Acorn mast, as by other woody Brush Species native that also create large mast(acorn) production (Quercus berber ) or other vegetative forms as lateral or prostrate positions furthering ground cover, Native perennials, long-term functioning which often was developed for Quercues Species there.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Native Flora and Fauna can be more broadly approached for Appropriate Use and Concerns as to the promotion of Native Species, Lifestyles, Natural Histories to redirect broader Sociological Inputs for restoring Native Species to recover the natural biota. From Forests to Grasslands, Use of Prescribed Fires and or other Historical Uses to redevelop these Plans and General Techniques to Re-socialize these Processes more naturally.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Their food sources need the concerns of habitat quality, freshwater determinations, defining broader consensus to keep Native Species in the cycles of Native Biota and Functioning of Ecosystems to Sustain Appropriate Management Techniques and Broader Sociological Education.

  • @ronward3949
    @ronward3949 ปีที่แล้ว

    Natural forms of migration patterns, breeding colonies or habitat selection, quality of wetland, marsh, beach, staging areas to feed, broader collaborative efforts to detail the cause and effect relationships of Avian guilds or lifestyles. Their life histories and patterns of Rewilding efforts to elaborate the commonalities between and among Species to develop strategies to conserve and preserve their continuity of survival, populations, habitat suitability to appropriately manage broader sociological concerns.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Leo is wrong I'm afraid.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Reducing game releasing will put more pressure on wild birds from predator pressure, predators have a varied diet and do not concentrate on game birds.Areas where gamebirds are no longer releasing gamebirds have suffered catastrophic declines in ground nesting birds.The fox is not the only predator foxes in the countryside are fairly stable but there is an increase in other predators.The pheasant and red legged partridge are naturalised birds and not non-native this is a mistake that is been repeated and used as a weapon from anti shooting organisations.

  • @normanmurray3659
    @normanmurray3659 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Foxes, badgers and mink will swim for prey, I find it strange that the chap at the top thinks that foxes don't get dirty, from my own experience I have seen foxes lying in swampy wet ground with rushes for cover waiting for many hours to ambush prey.These were foxes that I came across while walking the ground in search of foxes in areas of depleted prey.

  • @bertburnett4222
    @bertburnett4222 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    It's mostly on areas where gamebirds are reared that foxes are killed .. if they have a zero tolerance, as most keepers do, then it's not on the areas of released birds that's responsible for increases in foxes. Nature reserves and rewilding areas along with areas which are just not managed like forestry blocks are where the foxes are coming from.

  • @thehill1946
    @thehill1946 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    My experience of Curlew is limited, but when I was roe stalking in Scotland then every summer we would find ~ and avoid, nests and they were always on land which was of little agricultural value, except for sheep grazing. The success rates were generally excellent and the one and only sustainable influence, that I could see was that winged and ground vermin were killed given every opportunity by the resident 'keeper. Considering predators ~ for reasons that I don't fully understand except for their simple and inbuilt sense of resilience, predators do not need protection. There is no question that one of the major reasons for such an expansion in predators is the vast, and some may consider the obscene numbers of game birds currently being reared and release.

  • @michaelhayes1068
    @michaelhayes1068 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I remember when I lived along side the mountains of mourne and hear the curlews call out for there partner to return through the misty darkness.... in the same way a Fishermen wife filled with sadness waited for her man to return from the sea... David is correct a haunting and unforgettable sound...

    • @roset190
      @roset190 ปีที่แล้ว

      That’s such an evocative and poetic description x

    • @michaelhayes1068
      @michaelhayes1068 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@roset190 the curlew pair for life returning each year to the same spot ,, it is at that time the midnight song begins...

  • @linedallaire6637
    @linedallaire6637 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    In eastern Ontario, we used to see them but by now, 2022, they are gone

  • @linedallaire6637
    @linedallaire6637 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Here in east Ontario, those birds are almost being absent. We used to see those kinds of birds 23 years ago, less and less sightings as years go by. Now, 2022, I saw none

  • @terenceburchett6122
    @terenceburchett6122 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Every excuse or reason in the book except FARMING PRACTICES that kill chicks. The main losses are whilst nesting!

  • @andyobrien6263
    @andyobrien6263 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great words & amazing backing vocals! I’ve been filming a Curlew project in the Yorkshire Dales since March - the statistics are very disheartening but we need to find solutions otherwise the beautiful call will be lost!

  • @capturingnaturewithsandip
    @capturingnaturewithsandip 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Nice and beautiful video. Thanks for sharing. Big Like 263

  • @sambathnak6440
    @sambathnak6440 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    💗💗💗💗💗💗💗💖💖💖

  • @bizbizley
    @bizbizley 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    You used to see them every time we went birding. In fields, anywhere with brackish water and this is around Birmingham not the coasts. Same with Kestrels and so many other birds. Shame.

  • @terenceburchett6122
    @terenceburchett6122 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I disagree with this opinion. Cornwall still has nearly much the same number of Curlews as i remember 70 years ago. Scare mongering like a fresh daily BBC item. Doom and bloody gloom. On Xmas day morning at 8am, I stand on Hayle Causeway and listen to a couple hundred Curlews close by the railway platform. The only time of the year there is no traffic noise for a brief period. The sound of a large flock is magical!

  • @laurenhadfield5117
    @laurenhadfield5117 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Beautifully put together film. If only more people knew about the plight of our precious waders, including the beautiful curlew

  • @parallel-knight
    @parallel-knight 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Can one one please help me! I’m England Peak District area around Macclesfield. My dad found a curlew chick on the road at night on its own just now! What should I do help it by keeping it on its own or putting it with the chickens we have that have just had chicks of it’s own? Or go back up the road to the spot where it was found a let it go to try and call out to its mum and dad??? From pics I’ve seen it looks very young it’s about 5cm body size 7-15cm with legs fully extended, with specials all over. Can anyone help me to figure out what to do with it???

  • @jaxgeorge3088
    @jaxgeorge3088 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    He plays this on the big screen before his concerts.

  • @johnreynolds3348
    @johnreynolds3348 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    If you listen to the intro to Homes of Donegal by Paul Brady you'll hear a tin whistle playing and it sounds just like a Curlew. Just goes to show how evocatively musical their call is.