First hen harrier nest camera goes live
Funded by BASC’s Wildlife Habitat Charitable Trust, the camera is streaming live footage from a hen harrier nest on the Swinton Estate.
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BASC’s inaugural Wing Week will take place from 26 February – 4 March 2024, marked by a series of events centred around wildfowl and waders.
Wing Week is a BASC initiative designed to help members to take part in it’s wing survey, a long-term project which monitors data on the age and sex ratios of quarry species.Â
The BASC Wing Survey is a voluntary initiative to which anyone shooting wildfowl and waders can contribute. To take part, we ask shooters to remove one wing from each duck, goose or wader they shoot and submit it to BASC along with the date and location it was shot. For goose wings, there is also the option of using the Epicollect app to submit wing data via a photograph, negating the need to remove the wing.
During Wing Week, each BASC regional team will host an interactive event at which we will be accepting wings that you have collected. Local BASC teams, combined with guest speakers, will explain the importance of the wing survey, what it can tell us, plus covering a range of topics related to wildfowl species and wetland habitats.
With increasing scrutiny and regulation – often based on a lack of scientific certainty – having evidence that supports shooting’s sustainability is becoming an ever-increasing necessity. A better understanding of our migratory bird populations, particularly the numbers harvested, population trends and changing distributions, will also help shooting adapt to ensure it remains sustainable for the long term.
The wings of birds can tell us a lot about the populations we are shooting, which in turn can help us identify pressures affecting wildfowl populations, not only in the UK but across the flyway. With our collaborative working relationships across Europe, we can use wing survey data to inform management and conservation work in the UK and across the migratory flyway.Â
For the wing survey to be successful we require a good sample size of wings per species so that we can make it as representative as possible to the UK shot population.
By taking part in the wing survey, anyone harvesting ducks and geese both inland and on the foreshore can contribute to this valuable dataset.Â
Details of all Wing Week events will be posted on our website in due course. If you would like to submit any collected and frozen wings to the survey in the meantime, please contact your local BASC team to find out more about delivery or collection.
More information on the BASC Wing Survey can be found here.
Funded by BASC’s Wildlife Habitat Charitable Trust, the camera is streaming live footage from a hen harrier nest on the Swinton Estate.
A look at Ducks Unlimited, a US-based organisation founded by hunters and dedicated to conserving and restoring wildfowl habitat.
The woodcock is a magnificent quarry species. By taking part in a GWCT and BTO survey, you can actively contribute to its conservation.
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© 2023 British Association for Shooting and Conservation. Registered Office: Marford Mill, Rossett, Wrexham, LL12 0HL – Registered Society No: 28488R. BASC is a trading name of the British Association for Shooting and Conservation Limited which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) under firm reference number 311937.
If you have any questions or complaints about your BASC membership insurance cover, please email us. More information about resolving complaints can be found on the FCA website or on the EU ODR platform.
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