The UK is home to 73 million fewer birds today than it was in 1970, according to research from the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) published on the 7th May, International Dawn Chorus Day.
This staggering number – a decline of almost a third – is almost impossible to comprehend, but many older people will be aware of the disappearance of certain species, such as Cuckoo and Turtle Dove, from their local area.
Alongside this headline figure, BTO has created a website so that anyone can discover which species would once have been on their doorstep but are now a distant memory, simply by entering their postcode.
Almost 30 million House Sparrows, 20 million Starlings, 4 million Skylarks, 2 million Blackbirds and 1 million Chaffinches have vanished from the UK since 1970, scientists found by comparing the results of BTO-led surveys from across a 50 year period. The results paint a shocking picture of loss, with familiar birds as well as rarer species disappearing from our towns and countryside at an unprecedented rate.
The estimated losses actually total 114 million individuals (or 57 million breeding pairs). The losses are masked in part by increases in certain other species, including some familiar residents (e.g. Wren, Woodpigeon and Blackcap), and new arrivals (e.g. Little Egret and Cetti’s Warbler). The growing numbers of these species, which result in gains of c. 41 million individuals, do not compensate for the extraordinary losses overall, resulting in a net loss of 73 million individuals. Head to https://data.bto.org/doorstep-birds to find out which species have been lost where you live.
“Some detective work was required to assemble different sources of information, particularly as recording was more fragmented back in 1970. Counting birds on such a large scale isn’t easy and some numbers are difficult to ascertain. However, we’re lucky to have the help of thousands of highly skilled volunteers who have seen for themselves the way that birds have disappeared from UK landscapes.’’
Dr Rob Robinson, BTO Associate Director of Science, who led on the project




