Ringed plover breeding project sees numbers rise
A project to increase the number of plover birds has been hailed a success.
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said chick numbers had increased after efforts by volunteers to keep visitors and dogs away from coastal nests at Snettisham, Norfolk.
The ringed plover, with its black eye mask and distinctive orange and black-tipped bills, were red-listed by the bird charity, after their breeding populations suffered declines of greater than 50%.
Three years ago, 40 pairs of birds fledged 19 chicks, rising to 71 this year after funding from the Borough Council of King's Lynn and West Norfolk, and nature reserve Wild Ken Hill.
The wading birds tend to breed on sand, shingle and mudflats on the ground, according to RSPB ringed plover project officer Wynona Legg.
"Their eggs are incredibly camouflaged and incredibly beautiful, and they're very, very, clever little birds," she said.
"For a species that struggles to thrive alongside us on busy beaches, it's just an enormous amount of hope that it gives us to go forward."
BBC Springwatch and Autumnwatch has recently been based at Wild Ken Hill, and the area was also hit by flash fires during the hot summer of 2002.
Volunteers, like beach ranger Neil Senior, help to keep people and pets away from the chicks, which are difficult to see against their environment.
"People visit this wonderful area and they don't always know what's here," he said.
"And when you show them, they say 'oh wow, this is amazing'."
Snettisham Beach Sailing Club is located in the middle of the plovers' nesting site, an area of special scientific interest, a RAMSAR wetland site of international importance, as well as being in the middle of an RSPB reserve.
The sailing club's commodore Adrian Tebbutt said it was possible to live side by side with wildlife.
"Our members have really taken it on board and have taken to the fact that the ringed plovers are ours and we want to look after them," he said.
The rapid decline in numbers of ringed plovers was put down to a rise in tourists, a loss of habitat and climate change.
RSPB Snettisham site manager Jim Scott said: "It's absolutely fantastic to see this increase and it makes you feel like you're actually doing something worthwhile, helping this bird species to maintain its existence in this part of the coastline, and hopefully well into the future."
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